The (Q,r) model is a class of models in inventory theory.[1] A general (Q,r) model can be extended from both the EOQ model and the base stock model[2]

Overview

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Assumptions

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  1. Products can be analyzed individually
  2. Demands occur one at a time (no batch orders)
  3. Unfilled demand is back-ordered (no lost sales)
  4. Replenishment lead times are fixed and known
  5. Replenishments are ordered one at a time
  6. Demand is modeled by a continuous probability distribution
  7. There is a fixed cost associated with a replenishment order
  8. There is a constraint on the number of replenishment orders per year

Variables

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  •   = Expected demand per year
  •   = Replenishment lead time
  •   = Demand during replenishment lead time
  •   = probability density function of demand during lead time
  •   = cumulative distribution function of demand during lead time
  •   = mean demand during lead time
  •   = setup or purchase order cost per replenishment
  •   = unit production cost
  •   = annual unit holding cost
  •   = cost per stockout
  •   = annual unit backorder cost
  •   = replenishment quantity
  •   = reorder point
  •  , safety stock level
  •   = order frequency
  •   = fill rate
  •   = average number of outstanding back-orders
  •   = average on-hand inventory level

Costs

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The number of orders per year can be computed as  , the annual fixed order cost is F(Q,r)A. The fill rate is given by:

 

The annual stockout cost is proportional to D[1 - S(Q,r)], with the fill rate beying:

 

Inventory holding cost is  , average inventory being:

 

Backorder cost approach

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The annual backorder cost is proportional to backorder level:

 

Total cost function and optimal reorder point
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The total cost is given by the sum of setup costs, purchase order cost, backorders cost and inventory carrying cost:

 

The optimal reorder quantity and optimal reorder point are given by:

 

 


Normal distribution
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In the case lead-time demand is normally distributed:

 

Stockout cost approach

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The total cost is given by the sum of setup costs, purchase order cost, stockout cost and inventory carrying cost:

 

What changes with this approach is the computation of the optimal reorder point:

 

Lead-Time Variability

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X is the random demand during replenishment lead time:

 

In expectation:

 

Variance of demand is given by:

 

Hence standard deviation is:

 

Poisson distribution

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if demand is Poisson distributed:

 

See also

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References

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  1. ^ T. Whitin, G. Hadley, Analysis of Inventory Systems, Prentice Hall 1963
  2. ^ W.H. Hopp, M. L. Spearman, Factory Physics, Waveland Press 2008