• Title of article

    Long-range interactions and parallel scalability in molecular simulations Original Research Article

  • Author/Authors

    Michael Patra، نويسنده , , Marja T. Hyv?nen، نويسنده , , Emma Falck، نويسنده , , Mohsen Sabouri-Ghomi، نويسنده , , Ilpo Vattulainen، نويسنده , , Mikko Karttunen، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
  • Pages
    9
  • From page
    14
  • To page
    22
  • Abstract
    Typical biomolecular systems such as cellular membranes, DNA, and protein complexes are highly charged. Thus, efficient and accurate treatment of electrostatic interactions is of great importance in computational modeling of such systems. We have employed the GROMACS simulation package to perform extensive benchmarking of different commonly used electrostatic schemes on a range of computer architectures (Pentium-4, IBM Power 4, and Apple/IBM G5) for single processor and parallel performance up to 8 nodes—we have also tested the scalability on four different networks, namely Infiniband, GigaBit Ethernet, Fast Ethernet, and nearly uniform memory architecture, i.e. communication between CPUs is possible by directly reading from or writing to other CPUsʹ local memory. It turns out that the particle–mesh Ewald method (PME) performs surprisingly well and offers competitive performance unless parallel runs on PC hardware with older network infrastructure are needed. Lipid bilayers of sizes 128, 512 and 2048 lipid molecules were used as the test systems representing typical cases encountered in biomolecular simulations. Our results enable an accurate prediction of computational speed on most current computing systems, both for serial and parallel runs. These results should be helpful in, for example, choosing the most suitable configuration for a small departmental computer cluster.
  • Keywords
    electrostatics , Lipid membranes , gromacs , Molecular simulations , Parallel computing
  • Journal title
    Computer Physics Communications
  • Serial Year
    2007
  • Journal title
    Computer Physics Communications
  • Record number

    1137138