Publication | Closed Access
High-Performance Spectral Element Methods on Field-Programmable Gate Arrays : Implementation, Evaluation, and Future Projection
18
Citations
37
References
2021
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringVlsi DesignHardware AlgorithmComputer ArchitectureGpu ComputingElectromagnetic CompatibilityHardware SecurityArray ComputingHigh-performance ArchitectureSystems EngineeringComputational ElectromagneticsParallel ComputingElectronic CircuitElectrical EngineeringComputer EngineeringModern FpgasComputer ScienceMicroelectronicsFpga DesignOptoelectronicsHardware AccelerationCircuit DesignFuture ProjectionVlsi ArchitecturePerfect FpgaParallel ProgrammingCfd ApplicationsField-programmable Gate Arrays
Improvements in computer systems have historically relied on two well-known observations: Moore's law and Dennard's scaling. Today, both these observations are ending, forcing computer users, researchers, and practitioners to abandon the general-purpose architectures' comforts in favor of emerging post-Moore systems. Among the most salient of these post-Moore systems is the Field-Programmable Gate Array (FPGA), which strikes a convenient balance between complexity and performance. In this paper, we study modern FPGAs' applicability in accelerating the Spectral Element Method (SEM) core to many computational fluid dynamics (CFD) applications. We design a custom SEM hardware accelerator operating in double-precision that we empirically evaluate on the latest Stratix 10 GX-series FPGAs and position its performance (and power-efficiency) against state-of-the-art systems such as ARM ThunderX2, NVIDIA Pascal/Volta/Ampere Teslaseries cards, and general-purpose manycore CPUs. Finally, we develop a performance model for our SEM-accelerator, which we use to project future FPGAs' performance and role to accelerate CFD applications, ultimately answering the question: what characteristics would a perfect FPGA for CFD applications have?
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