Publication | Open Access
Evaluating the performance of parallel subsurface simulators: An illustrative example with PFLOTRAN
363
Citations
34
References
2013
Year
Numerical AnalysisEngineeringSimulationIllustrative ExampleComputer-aided DesignSubdivision SurfaceComputational MechanicsNumerical SimulationParallel SimulatorsTransport PhenomenaWeak ScalabilityModeling And SimulationParallel ComputingMulti-physics ModellingComputational GeometryGeometric ModelingMassively-parallel ComputingComputational GeochemistryMultiphysics ProblemComputer EngineeringLarge-scale SimulationUnstructured Mesh GenerationMultiphase FlowRegional DoubletAerospace EngineeringParallel Subsurface SimulatorsNatural SciencesCivil EngineeringMesh ReductionParallel ProgrammingSurface ModelingComputer ModelingMultiscale Modeling
[1] To better inform the subsurface scientist on the expected performance of parallel simulators, this work investigates performance of the reactive multiphase flow and multicomponent biogeochemical transport code PFLOTRAN as it is applied to several realistic modeling scenarios run on the Jaguar supercomputer. After a brief introduction to the code's parallel layout and code design, PFLOTRAN's parallel performance (measured through strong and weak scalability analyses) is evaluated in the context of conceptual model layout, software and algorithmic design, and known hardware limitations. PFLOTRAN scales well (with regard to strong scaling) for three realistic problem scenarios: (1) in situ leaching of copper from a mineral ore deposit within a 5-spot flow regime, (2) transient flow and solute transport within a regional doublet, and (3) a real-world problem involving uranium surface complexation within a heterogeneous and extremely dynamic variably saturated flow field. Weak scalability is discussed in detail for the regional doublet problem, and several difficulties with its interpretation are noted.
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