5,094 research outputs found
The DUNE-ALUGrid Module
In this paper we present the new DUNE-ALUGrid module. This module contains a
major overhaul of the sources from the ALUgrid library and the binding to the
DUNE software framework. The main changes include user defined load balancing,
parallel grid construction, and an redesign of the 2d grid which can now also
be used for parallel computations. In addition many improvements have been
introduced into the code to increase the parallel efficiency and to decrease
the memory footprint.
The original ALUGrid library is widely used within the DUNE community due to
its good parallel performance for problems requiring local adaptivity and
dynamic load balancing. Therefore, this new model will benefit a number of DUNE
users. In addition we have added features to increase the range of problems for
which the grid manager can be used, for example, introducing a 3d tetrahedral
grid using a parallel newest vertex bisection algorithm for conforming grid
refinement. In this paper we will discuss the new features, extensions to the
DUNE interface, and explain for various examples how the code is used in
parallel environments.Comment: 25 pages, 11 figure
A scalable parallel finite element framework for growing geometries. Application to metal additive manufacturing
This work introduces an innovative parallel, fully-distributed finite element
framework for growing geometries and its application to metal additive
manufacturing. It is well-known that virtual part design and qualification in
additive manufacturing requires highly-accurate multiscale and multiphysics
analyses. Only high performance computing tools are able to handle such
complexity in time frames compatible with time-to-market. However, efficiency,
without loss of accuracy, has rarely held the centre stage in the numerical
community. Here, in contrast, the framework is designed to adequately exploit
the resources of high-end distributed-memory machines. It is grounded on three
building blocks: (1) Hierarchical adaptive mesh refinement with octree-based
meshes; (2) a parallel strategy to model the growth of the geometry; (3)
state-of-the-art parallel iterative linear solvers. Computational experiments
consider the heat transfer analysis at the part scale of the printing process
by powder-bed technologies. After verification against a 3D benchmark, a
strong-scaling analysis assesses performance and identifies major sources of
parallel overhead. A third numerical example examines the efficiency and
robustness of (2) in a curved 3D shape. Unprecedented parallelism and
scalability were achieved in this work. Hence, this framework contributes to
take on higher complexity and/or accuracy, not only of part-scale simulations
of metal or polymer additive manufacturing, but also in welding, sedimentation,
atherosclerosis, or any other physical problem where the physical domain of
interest grows in time
Hydra: A Parallel Adaptive Grid Code
We describe the first parallel implementation of an adaptive
particle-particle, particle-mesh code with smoothed particle hydrodynamics.
Parallelisation of the serial code, ``Hydra'', is achieved by using CRAFT, a
Cray proprietary language which allows rapid implementation of a serial code on
a parallel machine by allowing global addressing of distributed memory.
The collisionless variant of the code has already completed several 16.8
million particle cosmological simulations on a 128 processor Cray T3D whilst
the full hydrodynamic code has completed several 4.2 million particle combined
gas and dark matter runs. The efficiency of the code now allows parameter-space
explorations to be performed routinely using particles of each species.
A complete run including gas cooling, from high redshift to the present epoch
requires approximately 10 hours on 64 processors.
In this paper we present implementation details and results of the
performance and scalability of the CRAFT version of Hydra under varying degrees
of particle clustering.Comment: 23 pages, LaTex plus encapsulated figure
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