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      An Implementation of the Smooth Particle Mesh Ewald Method on GPU Hardware.

      1 , 1
      Journal of chemical theory and computation
      American Chemical Society (ACS)

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          Abstract

          The smooth particle mesh Ewald summation method is widely used to efficiently compute long-range electrostatic force terms in molecular dynamics simulations, and there has been considerable work in developing optimized implementations for a variety of parallel computer architectures. We describe an implementation for Nvidia graphical processing units (GPUs) which are general purpose computing devices with a high degree of intrinsic parallelism and arithmetic performance. We find that, for typical biomolecular simulations (e.g., DHFR, 26K atoms), a single GPU equipped workstation is able to provide sufficient performance to permit simulation rates of ≈50 ns/day when used in conjunction with the ACEMD molecular dynamics package (1) and exhibits an accuracy comparable to that of a reference double-precision CPU implementation.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Chem Theory Comput
          Journal of chemical theory and computation
          American Chemical Society (ACS)
          1549-9618
          1549-9618
          Sep 08 2009
          : 5
          : 9
          Affiliations
          [1 ] High Performance Computing Service, Information and Communications Technologies, Imperial College London, South Kensington, London, SW7 2AZ, United Kingdom and Computational Biochemistry and Biophysics Lab (GRIB-IMIM), Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona Biomedical Research Park (PRBB), C/ Doctor Aiguader 88, 08003 Barcelona, Spain.
          Article
          10.1021/ct900275y
          26616618
          eb6189b0-594b-4b88-8ca3-1b2ff3a840a0
          History

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