Abstract
An atmospheric transport model, FRAME (Fine Resolution AMmonia Exchange), has been used to model the spatial pattern of ammonia concentrations and deposition over the British Isles for the first time. The model uses a multi-layer approach with diffusion through 33 layers to describe vertical concentration profiles in the atmosphere explicitly. Together with the necessary description of atmospheric reactions with sulphur and oxidised nitrogen, this imposes a major computational requirement, with the model having a run-time of 8.5 days on a mid-range workstation.
Improvement in the model run-time was sought by developing a parallel implementation coded in a data-parallel approach using High Performance Fortran. Running the code on a Cray T3E with 128 processors provided a speedup by a factor of 69. The code’s portability, its comparison with measurements and a new map of its application to the British Isles, are presented.
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Fournier, N. et al. (2002). Parallelisation and Application of a Multi-layer Atmospheric Transport Model to Quantify Dispersion and Deposition of Ammonia over the British Isles. In: Sportisse, B. (eds) Air Pollution Modelling and Simulation. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-04956-3_1
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-04956-3_1
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