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A Mixed Integer Linear Program for Solving a Multiple Route Taxi Scheduling Problem
Author(s) -
Justin Montoya,
Zachary Wood,
Sivakumar Rathinam,
Waqar Malik
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
aiaa guidance, navigation and control conference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2010-7692
Subject(s) - integer programming , computer science , scheduling (production processes) , integer (computer science) , linear programming , mathematical optimization , algorithm , mathematics , programming language
Aircraft movements on taxiways at busy airports often create bottlenecks. This paper introduces a mixed integer linear program to solve a Multiple Route Aircraft Taxi Scheduling Problem. The outputs of the model are in the form of optimal taxi schedules, which include routing decisions for taxiing aircraft. The model extends an existing single route formulation to include routing decisions. An efficient comparison framework compares the multi-route formulation and the single route formulation. The multi-route model is exercised for east side airport surface traffic at Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport to determine if any arrival taxi time savings can be achieved by allowing arrivals to have two taxi routes: a route that crosses an active departure runway and a perimeter route that avoids the crossing. Results indicate that the multi-route formulation yields reduced arrival taxi times over the single route formulation only when a perimeter taxiway is used. In conditions where the departure aircraft are given an optimal and fixed takeoff sequence, accumulative arrival taxi time savings in the multi-route formulation can be as high as 3.6 hours more than the single route formulation. If the departure sequence is not optimal, the multi-route formulation results in less taxi time savings made over the single route formulation, but the average arrival taxi time is significantly decreased.

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