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      GROMACS 4: Algorithms for Highly Efficient, Load-Balanced, and Scalable Molecular Simulation

      1 , 2 , 3 , 4
      Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation
      American Chemical Society (ACS)

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          Abstract

          Molecular simulation is an extremely useful, but computationally very expensive tool for studies of chemical and biomolecular systems. Here, we present a new implementation of our molecular simulation toolkit GROMACS which now both achieves extremely high performance on single processors from algorithmic optimizations and hand-coded routines and simultaneously scales very well on parallel machines. The code encompasses a minimal-communication domain decomposition algorithm, full dynamic load balancing, a state-of-the-art parallel constraint solver, and efficient virtual site algorithms that allow removal of hydrogen atom degrees of freedom to enable integration time steps up to 5 fs for atomistic simulations also in parallel. To improve the scaling properties of the common particle mesh Ewald electrostatics algorithms, we have in addition used a Multiple-Program, Multiple-Data approach, with separate node domains responsible for direct and reciprocal space interactions. Not only does this combination of algorithms enable extremely long simulations of large systems but also it provides that simulation performance on quite modest numbers of standard cluster nodes.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation
          J. Chem. Theory Comput.
          American Chemical Society (ACS)
          1549-9618
          1549-9626
          February 19 2008
          March 2008
          February 02 2008
          March 2008
          : 4
          : 3
          : 435-447
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Max-Planck Institute for Polymer Research, Ackermannweg 10, D-55128 Mainz, Germany
          [2 ]Department of Theoretical and Computational Biophysics, Max-Planck-Institute of Biophysical Chemistry, Am Fassberg 11, D-37077 Göttingen, Germany
          [3 ]Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Uppsala University, Husargatan 3, Box 596, SE-75124 Uppsala, Sweden
          [4 ]Stockholm Center for Biomembrane Research, Stockholm University, SE-10691 Stockholm, Sweden
          Article
          10.1021/ct700301q
          26620784
          daacc443-7e41-470d-b554-985d171a9f2a
          © 2008
          History

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