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Hybrid spectral finite difference simulations of stratified turbulent flows on distributed memory architectures

✍ Scribed by Rajat P. Garg; Joel H. Ferziger; Stephen G. Monismith


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1997
Tongue
English
Weight
342 KB
Volume
24
Category
Article
ISSN
0271-2091

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✦ Synopsis


A method for efficient implementation of a combined spectral finite difference algorithm for computation of incompressible stratified turbulent flows on distributed memory computers is presented. The solution technique is the fractional step method with a semi-implicit time advancement scheme. A single-programme multiple-data abstraction is used in conjunction with a static data-partitioning scheme. The distributed FFTs required in the explicit step are based on the transpose method and the large sets of independent tridiagonal systems of equations arising in the implicit steps are solved using the pipelined Thomas algorithm. A speed-up analysis of a model problem is presented for three partitioning schemes, namely unipartition, multipartition and transpose partition. It is shown that the unipartitioning scheme is best suited for this algorithm. Performance measurements of the overall as well as individual stages of the algorithm are presented for several different grids and are discussed in the context of associated dependency and communication overheads. An unscaled speed-up efficiency of up to 91% on doubling the number of processors and up to 60% on an eightfold increase in the number of processors was obtained on the Intel Paragon and iPSC=860 Hypercube. Absolute performance of the code was evaluated by comparisons with performance on the Cray-YMP. On 128 Paragon processors, performance up to five times that of a single-processor Cray-YMP was obtained. The validation of the method and results of grid refinement studies in stably stratified turbulent channel flows are presented.