粘性动力学模拟的分布加速度

Daniel F. Puleri, Aristotle X. Martin, A. Randles
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引用次数: 0

摘要

细胞粘附在从白细胞迁移到癌细胞转移的过程中起着关键作用。黏附细胞的相互作用可以发生在微血管网络的大距离上,细胞的移动距离远远大于其自身直径的长度尺度。因此,与生物学相关的研究需要对大视场域进行有效的建模,但目前的模型仅限于模拟粘附相互作用所需的亚微米尺度的几何形状,这大大增加了即使是小视场尺寸的计算需求。在这项研究中,我们引入了一种依赖于节点上并行和分布式并行的混合方案来加速完全可变形的粘附动力学单元模型。这种方案导致了使用多核每节点架构的现代超级计算机的高性能系统使用。节点上的加速通过空间数据结构和算法更改的组合来增强,以减少对原子操作的需求。这种可变形的粘附细胞模型通过混合并行化加速,使我们能够弥合高分辨率细胞模型之间的差距,高分辨率细胞模型可以捕获细胞与其微环境之间的亚微米粘附相互作用,而大尺度流体-结构相互作用(FSI)模型可以跟踪相当距离的细胞。通过将亚微米模拟环境集成到分布式FSI模拟中,我们能够研究以前不可行的研究问题,这些问题涉及微血管网络中的许多粘附细胞,例如癌细胞通过微循环的运输。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Distributed Acceleration of Adhesive Dynamics Simulations
Cell adhesion plays a critical role in processes ranging from leukocyte migration to cancer cell transport during metastasis. Adhesive cell interactions can occur over large distances in microvessel networks with cells traveling over distances much greater than the length scale of their own diameter. Therefore, biologically relevant investigations necessitate efficient modeling of large field-of-view domains, but current models are limited by simulating such geometries at the sub-micron scale required to model adhesive interactions which greatly increases the computational requirements for even small domain sizes. In this study we introduce a hybrid scheme reliant on both on-node and distributed parallelism to accelerate a fully deformable adhesive dynamics cell model. This scheme leads to performant system usage of modern supercomputers which use a many-core per-node architecture. On-node acceleration is augmented by a combination of spatial data structures and algorithmic changes to lessen the need for atomic operations. This deformable adhesive cell model accelerated with hybrid parallelization allows us to bridge the gap between high-resolution cell models which can capture the sub-micron adhesive interactions between the cell and its microenvironment, and large-scale fluid-structure interaction (FSI) models which can track cells over considerable distances. By integrating the sub-micron simulation environment into a distributed FSI simulation we enable the study of previously unfeasible research questions involving numerous adhesive cells in microvessel networks such as cancer cell transport through the microcirculation.
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