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Environment from the molecular level:

Environment from the molecular level: An e -science project for modelling the atomistic processes involved in environmental issues – Martin Dove – Department of Earth Sciences, University of Cambridge www.eminerals.org. Scales of Earth modelling. From global. … to molecular.

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Environment from the molecular level:

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  1. Environment from the molecular level: An e-science project for modelling the atomistic processes involved in environmental issues – Martin Dove – Department of Earth Sciences, University of Cambridge www.eminerals.org

  2. Scales of Earth modelling From global ... … to molecular

  3. Molecular environmental issues Radioactive waste disposal Pollution: molecules and atoms on mineral surfaces Crystal dissolution and weathering Crystal growth and scale inhibition

  4. Molecular environmental issues Radioactive waste disposal Pollution: molecules and atoms on mineral surfaces Crystal dissolution and weathering Crystal growth and scale inhibition

  5. University of Reading Royal Institution

  6. Plan of work High-requirement science High-performance codes Collaborative environment

  7. Plan of work High-requirement science High-performance codes Collaborative environment

  8. Studies of radiation damage for nuclear containment

  9. Studies of radiation damage for nuclear containment Short-term solutions: long term planning now essential with potential increase use of nuclear power and arms reductions

  10. Studies of radiation damage for nuclear containment Nature is known to have encapsulated radioactive isotopes in minerals such as zircon (ZrSiO4) over geological time scales

  11. Studies of radiation damage for nuclear containment Large-scale Molecular Dynamics simulations show the structural damage caused by radioactive decay Information can be related to macroscopic properties (swelling, leaching etc)

  12. Adsorption of organic molecules on mineral surfaces Aim is to investigate microscopic basis for binding of organic pollutant molecules (e.g. PCB, DDTs, dioxins) on solid matter of soils (minerals)

  13. Hydration energies of quartz surfaces Quantum mechanics calculations are being used to determine the hydration energies of quartz surfaces and to investigate the preferred state of water on the surfaces of quartz (Reading)

  14. Plan of work High-requirement science High-performance codes Collaborative environment

  15. Molecular simulation models QMC Quantum mechanics with plane-wave basis functions SIESTA, CRYSTAL Quantum mechanics with localised basis functions Detailed accuracy DL_POLY, METADISE Models with empirical potentials Integration of methodologies can combine all advantages GUESS Achievable length/time scale

  16. Examples of codes DL_POLY3: parallel molecular dynamics code. Modifications aimed at running efficient simulations with millions of atoms for simulations of radiation damage (Daresbury) SIESTA: Order-N quantum mechanics code. Objective to run with large samples and realistic fluids (Cambridge) SURFACE SIMULATIONS: New developments aimed at efficient scanning of many configurations of complex fluid-mineral interfaces, for studies of crystal growth and dissolution (Bath)

  17. Method developments EMBEDDED CLUSTERS: linking different simulations with varying sophistication, Aiming to solve the problem of various length scales (RI) QUANTUM MONTE CARLO: goes beyond standard quantum mechanics methods (DFT). This will be the first use of this tool in mineral sciences (UCL)

  18. Plan of work High-requirement science High-performance codes Collaborative environment

  19. Condor technologies • Condor: • Mature-ish technology to build small or large distributed computing systems from standard desktop computers The important point is that condor can allow you to use idle time on desktops, and hence harness the potential of powerful processors It really works! We have developed some tools to help the scientist, and these are in our demonstration

  20. The UCL windows condor pool • Runs WTS (Windows Terminal Server) • Approximately 750 cpu’s in 30 clusters. • Most are 1GHz Pentium 4, with 256/512Mb ram and 40Gb hard disks. • All 90%+ underutilised and running 24/7… • We are using condor to use this pool as a massive distributed computing system

  21. eMinerals minigrid and portal Minigrid makes the shared computing resources available to the project through the UK escience grid (built using globus, incorporating storage resrouce broker) The eminerals minigrid is accessed through the eminerals portal, based on the HPC and data portals developed at the Daresbury Laboratory The eminerals minigrid links to a storage resource broker to store the outputs of simulation runs

  22. eMinerals minigrid and portal Login window Metadata entry

  23. XML use for exchange of data Collaboration with Peter Murray-Rust to develop the computational chemistry extension to the Chemical Markup Language The idea is to convert codes to read/write XML (CMLcomp) files for ready exchange of data, with parsers for legacy codes

  24. Plan of work: summary High-requirement science High-performance codes Collaborative environment

  25. Summary Science: attack on environmental problems from the molecular level, including radiation damage and surfaces Code developments: range of empirical and ab initio approaches, with aim to take advantage of grid technologies for running larger and more complex systems Grid: development of eminerals minigrid, including use of condor & portal technologies (also developing use of other collaboration tools)

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