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Completed STANDARD GRANT National Science Foundation (US)

Collaborative Research: PPoSS: Planning: SEEr: A Scalable, Energy Efficient HPC Environment for AI-Enabled Science

$600K USD

Funder National Science Foundation (US)
Recipient Organization University of Chicago
Country United States
Start Date Oct 01, 2021
End Date Sep 30, 2022
Duration 364 days
Number of Grantees 2
Roles Principal Investigator; Co-Principal Investigator
Data Source National Science Foundation (US)
Grant ID 2119203
Grant Description

AI-enabled science, where advanced machine-learning technologies are used for surrogate models, autotuning, and in situ data analysis, is quickly being adopted in science and engineering for tackling complex and challenging computational problems. The wide adoption of heterogeneous systems embedded with different types of processing devices (CPUs, GPUs, and AI accelerators) further complicates the execution of AI-enabled science on supercomputers.

The research for AI-enabled simulations on heterogeneous systems is far from sufficient. The project’s novelty is to explore key features essential for a scalable, energy-efficient HPC environment for AI-enabled science on heterogeneous systems. The unified team of researchers tackles the problem in a cross-layer manner, focusing on the synergies among application algorithms, programming languages and compilers, runtime systems, and high-performance computing.

The project's impact is to catalyze scientific discoveries by making scientific computing faster, more scalable and more energy-efficient.

The long-term research vision is to develop SEEr, a scalable, energy-efficient HPC environment for scaling up and accelerating AI-enabled science for scientific discovery. This planning project explores fundamental questions to realize the research vision. The team focuses on scalable surrogate models for an incompressible computational fluid dynamics application using OpenFOAM, cost models for this application on heterogeneous resources, dynamic task mapping for efficient execution, and performance and power monitoring and characterization to explore tradeoffs among performance, scalability, and energy efficiency on a state-of-the-art testbed named Polaris.

This award reflects NSF's statutory mission and has been deemed worthy of support through evaluation using the Foundation's intellectual merit and broader impacts review criteria.

All Grantees

University of Chicago

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