Title :
Multi-GPU-based acceleration of the explicit time domain volume integral equation solver using MPI-OpenACC
Author :
Feki, Saber ; Al-Jarro, Ahmed ; Bagci, Hakan
Author_Institution :
King Abdullah Univ. of Sci. & Technol. (KAUST), Thuwal, Saudi Arabia
Abstract :
An explicit marching-on-in-time (MOT)-based time-domain volume integral equation (TDVIE) solver has recently been developed for characterizing transient electromagnetic wave interactions on arbitrarily shaped dielectric bodies (A. Al-Jarro et al., IEEE Trans. Antennas Propag., vol. 60, no. 11, 2012). The solver discretizes the spatio-temporal convolutions of the source fields with the background medium´s Green function using nodal discretization in space and linear interpolation in time. The Green tensor, which involves second order spatial and temporal derivatives, is computed using finite differences on the temporal and spatial grid. A predictor-corrector algorithm is used to maintain the stability of the MOT scheme. The simplicity of the discretization scheme permits the computation of the discretized spatio-temporal convolutions on the fly during time marching; no “interaction” matrices are pre-computed or stored resulting in a memory efficient scheme. As a result, most often the applicability of this solver to the characterization of wave interactions on electrically large structures is limited by the computation time but not the memory.
Keywords :
Green´s function methods; convolution; electric field integral equations; finite difference methods; graphics processing units; interpolation; predictor-corrector methods; spatiotemporal phenomena; tensors; time-domain analysis; Green function; Green tensor; MIP-OpenACC; MOT-based time-domain volume integral equation solver; TDVIE solver; arbitrarily shaped dielectric bodies; discretization scheme; finite differences; linear interpolation; marching-on-in-time; multiGPU-based acceleration; nodal discretization; predictor-corrector algorithm; second order spatial derivatives; second order temporal derivatives; source fields; spatiotemporal convolutions; time marching; transient electromagnetic wave interactions; Acceleration; Convolutional codes; Educational institutions; Finite difference methods; Finite element analysis; Integral equations; Time-domain analysis;
Conference_Titel :
Radio Science Meeting (Joint with AP-S Symposium), 2013 USNC-URSI
Conference_Location :
Lake Buena Vista, FL
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-1128-8
DOI :
10.1109/USNC-URSI.2013.6715396