Abstract
Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) is the simulation of fluid flow undertaken with the use of computational hardware. The underlying equations are computationally challenging to solve and necessitate high performance computing (HPC) to resolve in a practical timeframe when a reasonable level of fidelity is required. The simulations are memory intensive, having previously been limited to central processing unit (CPU) solvers, as graphics processing unit (GPU) video random access memory (VRAM) was insufficient. However, with recent developments in GPU design and increases to VRAM, GPU acceleration of CPU solved workflows is now possible. At HPC scale however, many operational details are still unknown. This paper utilizes ANSYS Fluent, a leading commercial code in CFD, to investigate the compute speed, power consumption and service
unit (SU) cost considerations for the GPU acceleration of CFD workflows on HPC architectures. To provide a comprehensive analysis, different CPU architectures, and GPUs have been assessed. It is seen that GPU compute speed is faster, however, the initialisation speed, power and cost performance is less clear cut. Whilst the larger A100 cards perform well with respect to power consumption, this is not observed for the V100 cards. In situations where more than one GPU is required, their adoption may not be beneficial from a power or cost
perspective.
unit (SU) cost considerations for the GPU acceleration of CFD workflows on HPC architectures. To provide a comprehensive analysis, different CPU architectures, and GPUs have been assessed. It is seen that GPU compute speed is faster, however, the initialisation speed, power and cost performance is less clear cut. Whilst the larger A100 cards perform well with respect to power consumption, this is not observed for the V100 cards. In situations where more than one GPU is required, their adoption may not be beneficial from a power or cost
perspective.
Original language | English |
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Pages | 1-12 |
Number of pages | 12 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 19 Feb 2024 |
Event | Supercomputing Asia 2024 - Sydney, Australia Duration: 19 Feb 2024 → 22 Feb 2024 |
Conference
Conference | Supercomputing Asia 2024 |
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Abbreviated title | SCA 2024 |
Country/Territory | Australia |
City | Sydney |
Period | 19/02/24 → 22/02/24 |
Keywords
- computing
- Supercomputing
- Distributed computing
- Computational Fluid Dynamics
- Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) software