A theoretical and experimental study of fast lower bounds for the two-dimensional bin packing problem

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Abstract

We address the two-dimensional bin packing problem with fixed orientation. This problem requires packing a set of small rectangular items into a minimum number of standard two-dimensional bins. It is a notoriously intractable combinatorial optimization problem and has numerous applications in packing and cutting. The contribution of this paper is twofold. First, we propose a comprehensive theoretical analysis of lower bounds and we elucidate dominance relationships. We show that a previously presented dominance result is incorrect. Second, we present the results of an extensive computational study that was carried out, on a large set of 500 benchmark instances, to assess the empirical performance of the lower bounds. We found that the so-called Carlier-Clautiaux-Moukrim lower bounds exhibits an excellent relative performance and yields the tightest value for all of the benchmark instances.

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Serairi, M., & Haouari, M. (2018). A theoretical and experimental study of fast lower bounds for the two-dimensional bin packing problem. RAIRO - Operations Research, 52(2), 391–414. https://doi.org/10.1051/ro/2017019

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