JOURNAL ARTICLE

Exploring the Impact of COVID-19 on Aircraft Boarding Strategies Using Discrete Event Simulation

Sadeem Munawar QureshiHassaan Qureshi

Year: 2022 Journal:   Operations and Supply Chain Management An International Journal Pages: 424-440

Abstract

Aviation is one of the most severely impacted industries by COVID-19.The passenger boarding-process is not only a bottleneck but is also one of the riskiest processes for COVID-19 transmission.There is a need for a decision-support tool that can proactively test the impact of COVID-19 policies on the passenger boarding-process.We achieve this by developing an adaptable modeling approach to Discrete Event Simulation (DES) that simulates the process of boarding under different COVID-19 policies and boarding-strategies.DES model was created using time and motion studies, flightlogs and manuals.Programing-logic was created using n=29 subject-matter experts.As a demonstratorcase, we tested seven of the most common boarding-strategies under different COVID-19 stages: pre-COVID, COVID-19 stage 1 and 2. Preliminary-results show the COVID-19 transmission risk may be decreased with a trade-off: passenger-satisfaction may decrease due to an increase in boarding-time and waiting-time.Steffen's method was most-effective in minimizing COVID-19 risk but is the most difficult to implement.Reverse pyramid and Window Middle Aisle, while slightly less effective than Steffen's method, but overall, more-effective and easier to implement with minimal COVID-19 risk.For COVID-19 stage 1 and 2, boarding time increased up to 33% and 64%, respectively, in-comparison to baseline pre-pandemic conditions.Further, up to 1.5 and 6.6 seat and aisle interferences along with a jetway-seat time of up to 13 minutes were observed.The developed modeling approach serves as a direct response to ICAO's (International Civil Aviation Organization) need for a tool to proactively test and develop policies that minimize COVID-19 risk.

Keywords:
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) 2019-20 coronavirus outbreak Event (particle physics) Discrete event simulation Aeronautics Computer science Virology Engineering Simulation Medicine Physics Outbreak Internal medicine

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4
Cited By
1.71
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
51
Refs
0.86
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Aviation Industry Analysis and Trends
Social Sciences →  Economics, Econometrics and Finance →  General Economics, Econometrics and Finance
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