- ISBN: 9780071622837 | 0071622837
- Cover: Hardcover
- Copyright: 8/17/2011
Preface | p. xv |
Acknowledgment | p. xvii |
Basic concepts and Background | |
Introduction | p. 3 |
Development of Green Supply Chain Management | p. 3 |
Evolution of GSCM from SCM | p. 4 |
Impact of GSCM on Industry | p. 6 |
Impact of GSCM on Industry Tactics | p. 7 |
Impact of the Green Supply Chain on Industrial Administration | p. 8 |
Intensification of Competition by GSCM | p. 10 |
Summary and Conclusion | p. 10 |
References | p. 12 |
Mathematical Background | p. 13 |
Fuzzy Numbers and Arithmetic | p. 13 |
Utility Theory | p. 15 |
The Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP) | p. 17 |
Basic Concepts and Pairwise Comparison | p. 18 |
The Procedure | p. 23 |
An Example: Determining Consumer Preference | p. 24 |
Optimization Programming | p. 30 |
Multi-Objective Linear Program (MOLP) | p. 31 |
Illustrative Example | p. 32 |
References | p. 33 |
Green Engineering Technology | |
p. 37 | |
Introduction | p. 37 |
Green Design | p. 38 |
Design for X | p. 38 |
Life Cycle Analysis | p. 39 |
Material Selection | p. 39 |
Some Green Design Guidelines | p. 40 |
Modular Product Structure | p. 40 |
Design of Functional Units | p. 40 |
Material Selection | p. 41 |
Minimize Waste and Harmful Contaminating Materials | p. 41 |
Ease of Separation | p. 41 |
Steps for Designing Green Products | p. 41 |
Product Recovery at the End-of-Life | p. 43 |
The 12 Principles of Green Engineering | p. 45 |
Inherent Rather Than Circumstantial | p. 45 |
Prevention Instead of Treatment | p. 45 |
Design for Separation | p. 46 |
Maximize Efficiency | p. 46 |
Output-Pulled Versus Input-Pushed | p. 46 |
Conserve Complexity | p. 46 |
Durability Rather Than Immortality | p. 46 |
Meet Need, Minimize Excess | p. 46 |
Minimize Material Diversity | p. 46 |
Integrate Material and Energy Flows | p. 46 |
Design for Commercial "Afterlife" | p. 46 |
Renewable Rather Than Depleting | p. 46 |
References | p. 47 |
Green Materials | p. 51 |
Introduction | p. 51 |
WEEE and RoHS Directives | p. 51 |
Selection of Materials | p. 52 |
Metals | p. 52 |
Ceramics | p. 52 |
Polymer Thermoplastics | p. 53 |
Polymer Thermosets | p. 53 |
Elastomers | p. 53 |
Natural Organic Materials | p. 53 |
Composites | p. 54 |
Conclusions | p. 54 |
References | p. 54 |
Environmental Design | p. 55 |
Introduction | p. 55 |
Design for Disassembly Index | p. 56 |
Nomenclature | p. 57 |
The Cost-Benefit Function | p. 58 |
DfDI Calculation Procedure | p. 60 |
An Application of the Procedure | p. 60 |
The Optimization Model | p. 67 |
An Application of the Optimization Procedure | p. 69 |
Use of Sensor Embedded Products | p. 71 |
Sensor-Embedded Products (SEPs) | p. 71 |
Remote Monitoring Center (RMC) | p. 72 |
Disassembly Center | p. 73 |
Disassembly Center | p. 73 |
Recycling Center | p. 74 |
Remanufacturing Center | p. 74 |
Disposal Center | p. 74 |
Sensor Data Mining | p. 74 |
Benefit form SEP and Product Monitoring Framework | p. 74 |
References | p. 75 |
Green Value Chain Management | |
Green Procurement: Vendor Selection with Risk Analysis | p. 79 |
Introduction | p. 79 |
Risk Analysis of Green Vendor Selection | p. 80 |
Criteria of Selection with Their Hierarchical Relations | p. 82 |
Weighting of the Criteria | p. 82 |
Measures of the Attributes | p. 83 |
Vendor Evaluation and Selection | p. 89 |
Risk Aggregation Method | p. 89 |
Ranking Method | p. 90 |
Sensitivity Analysis and Alliance Development | p. 91 |
Issues of Sensitivity Analysis | p. 91 |
Sensitivity Analysis on AHP | p. 92 |
Summary of the Selection Procedure | p. 92 |
Numerical Example | p. 93 |
Estimation of Risks and Ranking of Two Suppliers | p. 93 |
Sensitivity Analysis | p. 99 |
Conclusion of the Example | p. 101 |
Summary and Conclusion | p. 101 |
References | p. 102 |
Pairwise Matrices Given for AHP of the Numerical Example | p. 102 |
Green Production: Manufacture and Remanufacture in Certain and Uncertain Environments | p. 105 |
Introduction | p. 105 |
Current Development | p. 107 |
Elements of the Lot-Sizing Model | p. 107 |
Current Lot-Sizing Models | p. 108 |
Conclusion | p. 109 |
The Green Lot-Sizing Production Model | p. 111 |
Framework of the Periodic Closed-Loop Production System | p. 111 |
Modeling in a certain Environment | p. 111 |
Modeling in an Uncertain Environment | p. 115 |
Numerical Illustration | p. 120 |
Summary and Conclusion | p. 123 |
References | p. 124 |
Green Logistics Recycling with Certain and Uncertain Situation | p. 125 |
Introduction | p. 125 |
Deterministic Modeling of Closed-Loop Logistics | p. 127 |
The Deterministic Closed-Loop Logistics Model (DCLL) | p. 128 |
The Transformed Integer Linear Programming Model | p. 131 |
An Illustrative Example | p. 134 |
Conclusions | p. 164 |
References | p. 165 |
Comparison of the Expected Objective Value Between q1 and q2 | p. 167 |
Green Customers: Features and Identification | p. 169 |
Introduction | p. 169 |
Features of the Green Consumer | p. 169 |
Demographic Characteristics | p. 170 |
Psychographic Characteristics | p. 171 |
Questionnaire Design | p. 172 |
Analytical Methods | p. 172 |
Sample Size Determination | p. 172 |
Data Analysis | p. 181 |
Cluster Analysis | p. 182 |
Target Consumer Identification: Numerical Illustration | p. 187 |
Sample Size Determination | p. 187 |
Quantification of the Survey Data | p. 189 |
Distributions of Sociodemographic Variables | p. 189 |
Factor Analysis | p. 189 |
Target Customer Identification | p. 190 |
Conclusion of the Numerical Example | p. 192 |
Summary and Conclusion | p. 194 |
References | p. 196 |
End-of-Life Management:Disassembly and Reuse | p. 197 |
Introduction | p. 197 |
Current Development | p. 198 |
Issues with a Closed-Loop Supply Chain | p. 198 |
Life-Cycle Effects on the Quantity and Quality of Returned Products | p. 199 |
EOL and End-of-Use Recovery selection | p. 201 |
Concept of Disassembly | p. 202 |
Design for Disassembly Representation | p. 204 |
Demand-Driven Disassembly Planning | p. 208 |
Disassembly to Demand (D2D): Modeling and Analysis | p. 208 |
Representation of Product Structure | p. 209 |
Disassembly Configurations for Modules | p. 210 |
Restrictions of Recovery Options | p. 211 |
Mathematical Model | p. 211 |
An Illustrative Example | p. 220 |
Conclusion and Future Research Direction | p. 221 |
References | p. 223 |
Green Information Management Systems | |
Database for Life Cycle Assessment: Procedure with Database | p. 229 |
Introduction | p. 229 |
Applicable International Standards on Product Carbon FootPrint | p. 230 |
Available Software for LCA | p. 231 |
Inventory of Product Carbon Footprint | p. 235 |
Summary and Conclusion | p. 236 |
Procedure of LCA | p. 237 |
Setting the Inventory Target for the selected Product | p. 237 |
Setting the Borderline | p. 237 |
Identification of Emission Source | p. 238 |
Data Collection | p. 239 |
Quantification of Emission | p. 239 |
Methods of Quantification | p. 239 |
Selection of the Emission Coefficient | p. 241 |
Summary of Quantification Results | p. 241 |
Construction of Inventory Database | p. 241 |
Impartial Third-Party Verification | p. 241 |
General Requirements | p. 242 |
Monitoring Mechanism of Impartiality | p. 244 |
An Illustrative Example | p. 244 |
Setting the Borderline | p. 244 |
Identification of Emission Source | p. 245 |
Application Simulation | p. 245 |
Quantification of Emission from Storage and Transport | p. 248 |
Summary and Discussion | p. 250 |
Conclusion | p. 251 |
References | p. 251 |
Emission Factors and Coefficient Charts of Different Industries and Nations | p. 252 |
Web-Based Information Support Systems | p. 265 |
Introduction | p. 265 |
Infrastructure of Recommender Systems | p. 267 |
Recommendation Methods | p. 268 |
Roles and Their Goals in a Recommender System | p. 270 |
Summary and Discussion | p. 271 |
Operations in the Submodules of the System | p. 271 |
Offline Operations | p. 271 |
Online Operations | p. 276 |
Measures of Recommendation Performance | p. 279 |
Summary of Offline and Online Operation Procedures | p. 279 |
An Illustrative Case: Laptops RS of a 3C Retailer | p. 280 |
Experiments of Strategy Implementation | p. 280 |
Summary and Remarks of Experiments | p. 284 |
Conclusion | p. 288 |
References | p. 289 |
Index | p. 291 |
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