TY - JOUR
T1 - Evolution Model of Emergency Material Supply Chain Stress Based on Stochastic Petri Nets—A Case Study of Emergency Medical Material Supply Chains in China
AU - Chen, Qiming
AU - Zhang, Jihai
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 by the authors.
PY - 2025/6
Y1 - 2025/6
N2 - In this study, we conceptualize the demands imposed on emergency supply chains during extraordinary emergency events as “stress” and develop a scenario-based stress evolution (SE) analytical approach in emergency mobilization decision-making. First, we characterize emergency supply chain stress by uncertainty, abruptness, urgency, massiveness of scale, and latency. Leveraging lifecycle theory and aligning it with the event’s natural lifecycle progression, we construct a dual-cycle model—the emergency event-stress dual-cycle curve model—to intuitively conceptualize the SE process. Second, taking China’s emergency medical supply chain as an illustrative example, we employ set theory to achieve a structured representation of emergency supply chain stress evolution (ESCSE). Third, we propose a novel ESCSE modeling methodology based on stochastic Petri nets and establish both an ESCSE model and a corresponding isomorphic Markov chain model. To address parameter uncertainties inherent in the modeling process, the fuzzy theory is integrated for parameter optimization, enabling realistic simulation of emergency supply chain stress evolution dynamics. Finally, the SE of the ibuprofen supply chain in Beijing during the COVID-19 pandemic is presented as a case study to demonstrate the working principle of the model. The results indicate that the ESCSE model effectively simulates the SE process, identifies critical states, and triggers actions. It also reveals the evolution trends of key scenario elements, thereby assisting decision-makers in deploying more targeted mobilization strategies in dynamic and changing environments.
AB - In this study, we conceptualize the demands imposed on emergency supply chains during extraordinary emergency events as “stress” and develop a scenario-based stress evolution (SE) analytical approach in emergency mobilization decision-making. First, we characterize emergency supply chain stress by uncertainty, abruptness, urgency, massiveness of scale, and latency. Leveraging lifecycle theory and aligning it with the event’s natural lifecycle progression, we construct a dual-cycle model—the emergency event-stress dual-cycle curve model—to intuitively conceptualize the SE process. Second, taking China’s emergency medical supply chain as an illustrative example, we employ set theory to achieve a structured representation of emergency supply chain stress evolution (ESCSE). Third, we propose a novel ESCSE modeling methodology based on stochastic Petri nets and establish both an ESCSE model and a corresponding isomorphic Markov chain model. To address parameter uncertainties inherent in the modeling process, the fuzzy theory is integrated for parameter optimization, enabling realistic simulation of emergency supply chain stress evolution dynamics. Finally, the SE of the ibuprofen supply chain in Beijing during the COVID-19 pandemic is presented as a case study to demonstrate the working principle of the model. The results indicate that the ESCSE model effectively simulates the SE process, identifies critical states, and triggers actions. It also reveals the evolution trends of key scenario elements, thereby assisting decision-makers in deploying more targeted mobilization strategies in dynamic and changing environments.
KW - emergency medical supplies
KW - emergency mobilization
KW - emergency supply chain stress evolution (ESCSE)
KW - scenario modelling
KW - stochastic Petri net
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105008942851&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3390/systems13060423
DO - 10.3390/systems13060423
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105008942851
SN - 2079-8954
VL - 13
JO - Systems
JF - Systems
IS - 6
M1 - 423
ER -