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Optimisation of bottling process using “hard” total quality management elements

Benjamin Chukudi Oji (Department of Mechanical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, University of Lagos, Lagos, Nigeria)
Sunday Ayoola Oke (Department of Mechanical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, University of Lagos, Lagos, Nigeria)

The TQM Journal

ISSN: 1754-2731

Article publication date: 4 September 2020

Issue publication date: 9 February 2021

393

Abstract

Purpose

There is growing evidence of a knowledge gap in the association of maintenance with production activities in bottling plants. Indeed, insights into how to jointly optimise these activities are not clear. In this paper, two optimisation models, Taguchi schemes and response surface methodology are proposed.

Design/methodology/approach

Borrowing from the “hard” total quality management elements in optimisation and prioritisation literature, two new models were developed based on factor, level and orthogonal array selection, signal-to-noise ratio, analysis of variance and optimal parametric settings as Taguchi–ABC and Taguchi–Pareto. An additional model of response surface methodology was created with analysis on regression, main effects, residual plots and surface plots.

Findings

The Taguchi S/N ratio table ranked planned maintenance as the highest. The Taguchi–Pareto shows the optimal parametric setting as A4B4C1 (28 h of production, 30.56 shifts and 37 h of planned maintenance). Taguchi ABC reveals that the planned maintenance and number of shifts will influence the outcome of production greatly. The surface regression table reveals that the production hours worked decrease at a value of planned maintenance with a decrease in the number of shifts.

Originality/value

This is the first time that joint optimisation for bottling plant will be approached using Taguchi–ABC and Taguchi–Pareto. It is also the first time that response surface will be applied to optimise a unique platform of the bottling process plant.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The assistance received from Mr. Stephen Chidera Nwafor is appreciated.

Citation

Oji, B.C. and Oke, S.A. (2021), "Optimisation of bottling process using “hard” total quality management elements", The TQM Journal, Vol. 33 No. 2, pp. 473-502. https://doi.org/10.1108/TQM-03-2020-0057

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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