Will Your Next Shampoo Be Developed on GPUs?SANTA CLARA, CA, Jan 14, 2010 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) --
Improving the cleaning power of shampoos and liquid detergents and
making them more environmentally friendly is as much a computer
problem as it is a balance of chemicals. By harnessing the parallel
processing power of NVIDIA(R) Tesla(TM) GPUs, researchers at Temple
University are developing a computer simulation model which provides
companies like Procter and Gamble with a fast, cost effective and
accurate tool for research and development of surfactant molecules.
Surfactants have many uses; for example they provide the cleaning
capacity and texture of shampoos, laundry detergents, and many other
cleaning products. Their job is to attach themselves to dirt and make
it mix with water, and their effectiveness in this process determines
their ability to clean. The process of finding new, better
surfactants and testing their effectiveness in laboratories is time
consuming and costly.
"The computer models needed to accurately simulate surfactant
properties are extremely demanding in terms of computational power,"
said Axel Kohlmeyer of the Institute for Computational Molecular
Science at Temple University. "We discovered that by adding just two
NVIDIA Tesla C1060 GPUs, each node in our newest cluster can do 16
times more work, and thus multiplies our local compute capacity far
beyond what we could previously get through the national
supercomputing centers."
"To put this into context, we can run a single GPU-optimized
molecular dynamics simulation on two Tesla GPUs as fast as we can on
128 CPU cores of a Cray XT3 supercomputer or on 1024 CPUs of an IBM
BlueGene/L machine with conventional software," continues Dr.
Kohlmeyer. "With the NVIDIA Tesla GPU-based solution, we now have a
more powerful, cost-effective solution that will enable us to advance
critical research at a much faster pace. We're moving rapidly ahead
to deploy a larger Tesla GPU cluster at Temple, which will give
another huge boost to our work."
The Temple researchers are using GPU-accelerated HOOMD (Highly
Optimized Object Oriented
Molecular Dynamics) simulation software,
written by researchers at the Department of Energy's
Ames Laboratory
to leverage the NVIDIA GPUs.
In addition to deploying a small local GPU cluster, the university
team will also look to scale its work using the NCSA Lincoln cluster,
where the computational output has been boosted to 47 TeraFLOPS
through the addition of Tesla S1070 1U GPU systems.
For more information:
Video of the Temple University team discussing their work in
surfactant research
Molecular dynamics using GPUs
Institute for
Computational Molecular Science at Temple University
The HOOMD
application from Ames Lab
NCSA Supercomputer
About NVIDIA
NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) awakened the world to the power of computer
graphics when it invented the graphics processing unit (GPU) in 1999.
Since then, it has consistently set new standards in visual
computing with breathtaking, interactive graphics. Expertise in
programmable GPUs has led to breakthroughs in parallel processing
which make supercomputing inexpensive and widely accessible. Fortune
magazine has ranked NVIDIA #1 in innovation in the semiconductor
industry for two years in a row. For more information, see
www.nvidia.com
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NVIDIA Corporation
(408) 416 7943
ahumber@nvidia.com
SOURCE: NVIDIA
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