Modelling product structures by generic bills-of-materials
著者
書誌事項
Modelling product structures by generic bills-of-materials
(Manufacturing research and technology, 13)
Elsevier, 1992
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注記
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Modelling products and the relationships between products i.e. product structures is the main theme of this volume. Product variety has grown tremendously over the past decade due to the ever growing complexity of product structures. The problem of representing product structures when product variety is extremely large is examined in detail. The subject is reviewed from an information systems aspect, taking into account the needs of the designer. Shortcomings of existing concepts and techniques are carefully analysed and described, a set of basic requirements is formulated and alternative concepts are developed. The book can be divided into three parts. The first part gives insight into the commonly applied techniques for representing product structures by bills-of-material. The second part introduces a framework for a new generation of bill-of-material processing systems which are particularly suitable for supporting production environments characterized by large product variety. The third part introduces a new set of concepts for representing product structures in bill-of-material processing systems.
The book is intended for research institutes and software developers in the areas of production control, information systems and/or engineering data management. It will also be of great value for post-graduate students and companies' specialists in these areas. In particular the first six chapters of the book will also be suitable for a much wider audience of people who want to get a better understanding of the basics of the bill-of-material concept.
目次
1. Introduction. 2. Product (structure) data in MRP-oriented production control information systems. 3. Production control environments and bills-of-material. 4. MRP-II approach to structuring bills-of-material in environments with large product variety. 5. An architecture for product specification and bill-of-material generating systems. 6. Product specification systems and bill-of-material generating systems in literature. 7. Representing product specification data. 8. The variant bill-of-material concept. 9. The generic bill-of-material concept. 10. Set-relationships between items. 11. A conceptual database model for a generic bill-of-material processor. 12. A case study: generative bills-of-material in practice. 13. Summary and conclusions. Appendix A: Notation conventions in entity-type relationship diagrams. References. Subject index.
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