$2.8M DoE Exascale Computing Project Team Includes School of CSE's Chau and Chow

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Summaries

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Project aims to unlock power of next-gen supercomputers to explore chemistry.

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Two School of Computational Science and Engineering (CSE) associate professors are part of a research team that aims to unlock the power of next-generation supercomputers to better understand chemical systems.

Early in the next decade, the first computers capable of at least one quintillion calculations per second will come online. That’s a one followed by 18 zeroes, or what are known as exascale machines.

These machines will have one billion processing cores. Thing is, we don’t have computer codes that can actually use all that power efficiently — power that has the potential to unlock all kinds of new knowledge.

Polo Chau and Edmond Chow, associate professors in the School of CSE and Engineering, are team members on a new $2.8 million project to make use of all those processors to study the interactions of atoms using quantum mechanics.

Funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, the four-year study — if successful — will mean scientists can study and understand chemical systems that include up to 10 million atoms.

Phanish Suryanarayana in the School of Civil and Environmental Engineering is the team leader. More details about the project are included in a story on the School of CEE website.

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Computational Science and Engineering

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Status
  • Created By: Ben Snedeker
  • Workflow Status: Draft
  • Created On: Oct 3, 2018 - 10:30am
  • Last Updated: Oct 3, 2018 - 10:30am