Component architectures for quantum chemistry: forging new capabilities and insights
Pages 137 - es
Abstract
We review the use of the Common Component Architecture approach within the quantum chemistry domain to tackle the software engineering challenges which arise as advanced algorithms are adopted and growing numbers of software packages are integrated to study complex, coupled physical phenomena. The development of common interfaces has allowed the adoption of advanced optimization solvers and high-level interchangeability of quantum chemistry packages. Components have been created which manage multiple levels of parallelism, providing much more efficient usage of parallel machines. Early efforts towards low-level integration of chemistry packages are examined. The ability to share intermediate data expands the capabilities available to any one software package, thereby enabling the rapid development of advanced methods. New methods for the study of reactions involving heavy elements, which depend on our component environment, are highlighted.
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- Component architectures for quantum chemistry: forging new capabilities and insights
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Tackling component interoperability in quantum chemistry software
CompFrame '07: Proceedings of the 2007 symposium on Component and framework technology in high-performance and scientific computingThe Common Component Architecture (CCA) offers an environment that allows scientific packages to dynamically interact with each other through components. Conceptually, a computation can be constructed with plug-and-play components from any componentized ...
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- SIGARCH: ACM Special Interest Group on Computer Architecture
- IEEE-CS: Computer Society
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Association for Computing Machinery
New York, NY, United States
Publication History
Published: 11 November 2006
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SC '06
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SC '06: International Conference for High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage and Analysis
November 11 - 17, 2006
Florida, Tampa
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SC '06 Paper Acceptance Rate 54 of 239 submissions, 23%;
Overall Acceptance Rate 1,516 of 6,373 submissions, 24%
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