| Literature DB >> 28538143 |
Yu-Hang Tang1, Lu Lu1, He Li1, Constantinos Evangelinos2, Leopold Grinberg2, Vipin Sachdeva2, George Em Karniadakis3.
Abstract
We present OpenRBC, a coarse-grained molecular dynamics code, which is capable of performing an unprecedented in silico experiment-simulating an entire mammal red blood cell lipid bilayer and cytoskeleton as modeled by multiple millions of mesoscopic particles-using a single shared memory commodity workstation. To achieve this, we invented an adaptive spatial-searching algorithm to accelerate the computation of short-range pairwise interactions in an extremely sparse three-dimensional space. The algorithm is based on a Voronoi partitioning of the point cloud of coarse-grained particles, and is continuously updated over the course of the simulation. The algorithm enables the construction of the key spatial searching data structure in our code, i.e., a lattice-free cell list, with a time and space cost linearly proportional to the number of particles in the system. The position and the shape of the cells also adapt automatically to the local density and curvature. The code implements OpenMP parallelization and scales to hundreds of hardware threads. It outperforms a legacy simulator by almost an order of magnitude in time-to-solution and >40 times in problem size, thus providing, to our knowledge, a new platform for probing the biomechanics of red blood cells.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28538143 PMCID: PMC5444005 DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2017.04.020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biophys J ISSN: 0006-3495 Impact factor: 4.033