Bugajev, AndrejCiegis, RaimondasCarretero Pérez, JesúsGarcía Blas, JavierPetcu, Dana2016-04-282016-04-282016-02Carretero Pérez, Jesús; et.al. (eds.). (2016). Proceedings of the First PhD Symposium on Sustainable Ultrascale Computing Systems (NESUS PhD 2016). Timisoara, Romania. Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, ARCOS. Pp. 17-20.978-84-608-6309-0https://hdl.handle.net/10016/22867Proceedings of the First PhD Symposium on Sustainable Ultrascale Computing Systems (NESUS PhD 2016) Timisoara, Romania. February 8-11, 2016.Here we present the part of results obtained in PhD thesis “The investigation of efficiency of physical phenomena modelling using differential equations on distributed systems” by Andrej Bugajev. This work is dedicated to development of mathematical modelling software. While applying a numerical method it is important to take into account the limited computer resources, the architecture of these resources and how do methods affect software robustness. Three main aspects of this investigation are that software implementation must be efficient, robust and be able to utilize specific hardware resources. The hardware specificity in this work is related to distributed computations. The investigation is done for FVM method usage to implement efficient calculations of a very specific heat transferring problem. That lets to create technological components that make a software implementation robust and efficient. OpenFOAM open source software is selected as a basis for implementation of calculations and a few algorithms to solve efficiency issues are proposed. The FVM parallel solver is implemented and analyzed, it is adapted to heterogeneous cluster Vilkas.4application/pdfengAtribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 3.0 EspañaFinite Volume MethodOpenFOAMParallel algorithmsDomain decompositionDistributed computingParallel computingThe analysis of parallel OpenFOAM solver for the heat transfer in electrical power cablesconference paperInformáticaopen access1720Proceedings of the First PhD Symposium on Sustainable UltrascaleComputing Systems (NESUS PhD 2016)