3.8 Article

A streaming multi-GPU implementation of image simulation algorithms for scanning transmission electron microscopy

Journal

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1186/s40679-017-0048-z

Keywords

Scanning transmission electron microscopy; PRISM; Multislice; GPU; CUDA; Electron scattering; Imaging simulation; High performance computing; Atomic electron tomography

Categories

Funding

  1. STROBE: A National Science Foundation Science & Technology Center [DMR 1548924]
  2. Office of Basic Energy Sciences of the US DOE [DE-SC0010378]
  3. NSF DMREF program [DMR-1437263]
  4. Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, of the U.S. Department of Energy [DE-AC02-05CH11231]
  5. Division Of Materials Research
  6. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [1623947] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Simulation of atomic-resolution image formation in scanning transmission electron microscopy can require significant computation times using traditional methods. A recently developed method, termed plane-wave reciprocal-space interpolated scattering matrix (PRISM), demonstrates potential for significant acceleration of such simulations with negligible loss of accuracy. Here, we present a software package called Prismatic for parallelized simulation of image formation in scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) using both the PRISM and multislice methods. By distributing the workload between multiple CUDA-enabled GPUs and multicore processors, accelerations as high as 1000 x for PRISM and 15 x for multislice are achieved relative to traditional multislice implementations using a single 4-GPU machine. We demonstrate a potentially important application of Prismatic, using it to compute images for atomic electron tomography at sufficient speeds to include in the reconstruction pipeline. Prismatic is freely available both as an open-source CUDA/C++ package with a graphical user interface and as a Python package, PyPrismatic.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

3.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available