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High-performance computing may improve combustion efficiency

08.29.05 | DOE/Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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In one of the largest simulations ever brought to bear on this problem, researchers at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory performed quantum chemical calculations to accurately predict the heat of formation of octane, a key component of gasoline.

The calculation--performed using 1,400 parallel processors--took only 23 hours to complete and achieved a sustained effi ciency of 75 percent, compared to the 5 to 10 percent effi ciency of most codes. For comparison, the best one-processor desktop computer would have required a three and a half years and 2.5 terabytes of memory to run the calculation.

These pioneering calculations also helped identify the level of theory needed for subsequent efforts to reliably predict the heat of formation of larger alkanes in diesel fuel, for which there is very little experimental data, and the heat of formation of key reactive intermediates, such as alkyl and alkoxy radicals, for which there is no experimental data.

University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa researcher David Dixon will be presenting his results at 8:40 a.m., Monday, Aug. 29. Dixon conducted his research as a user of the Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory located at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.

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APA:
DOE/Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. (2005, August 29). High-performance computing may improve combustion efficiency. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/8OJJ7K21/high-performance-computing-may-improve-combustion-efficiency.html
MLA:
"High-performance computing may improve combustion efficiency." Brightsurf News, Aug. 29 2005, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/8OJJ7K21/high-performance-computing-may-improve-combustion-efficiency.html.