Skip to main content
SHARE
Publication

Scaling and performance portability of the particle-in-cell scheme for plasma physics applications through mini-apps targeting exascale architectures

by Sriramkrishnan Muralikrishnan, Matthias Frey, Alessandro Vinciguerra, Miroslav K Stoyanov, Andreas Adelmann
Publication Type
Conference Paper
Book Title
Proceedings of the 2024 SIAM Conference on Parallel Processing for Scientific Computing (PP)
Publication Date
Page Numbers
26 to 38
Conference Name
2024 SIAM Conference on Parallel Processing for Scientific Computing
Conference Location
Baltimore, Maryland, United States of America
Conference Sponsor
SIAM, NSF
Conference Date

We perform a scaling and performance portability study of the particle-in-cell scheme for plasma physics applications through a set of mini-apps we name "Alpine", which can make use of exascale computing capabilities. The mini-apps are based on Independent Parallel Particle Layer, a framework that is designed around performance portable and dimension independent particles and fields. We benchmark the simulations with varying parameters such as grid resolutions (5123 to 20483) and number of simulation particles (109 to 1011) with the following mini-apps: weak and strong Landau damping, bump-on-tail and two-stream instabilities, and the dynamics of an electron bunch in a charge-neutral Penning trap. We show strong and weak scaling and analyze the performance of different components on several pre-exascale architectures such as Piz-Daint, Cori, Summit and Perlmutter. While the scaling and portability study helps identify the performance critical components of the particle-in-cell scheme in the current state-of-the-art computing architectures, the mini-apps by themselves can be used to develop new algorithms and optimize their high performance implementations targeting exascale architectures.