To meet the project requirements for R&D, GAC RDC deployed NVIDIA V100 SXM2 Tensor Core GPUs on its heterogeneous hybrid cloud platform for high performance computing, each featuring 5,120 CUDA® cores. With a double precision floating-point computing capability of 7.8 teraFLOPS (TFLOPS), its GPU parallel computing efficiency dramatically improved compared to CPUs on the same model with the same simulation accuracy. A single project has about 120 million CFD grids (particles), and the simulation calculation takes about 10 hours.
The GAC RDC aerodynamics team adopted the Altair ultraFluidX CFD software based on GPU double-precision computing technology with NVIDIA V100 computing resources. In less than six months, the team completed over 200 transient CFD simulations of the vehicle outflow field, resulting in several viable solutions. The simulation value of drag coefficient in the demo state was 0.147 and the test value was 0.146 (per the Shanghai Automotive Wind Tunnel Center of Tongji University), setting a new record on lowest drag coefficient with impressive results over the previous record of 0.19. Compared to the transient CFD simulation based on conventional approaches, the manual effort required for modeling was reduced by nearly 60 percent and the total simulation time was shortened by about 70 percent.
Powered by the hybrid cloud platform for HPC heterogeneous computing, GAC RDC has built an agile system for vehicle aerodynamics development that combines holographic CFD simulation with wind tunnel tests— effectively improving its development efficiency and accuracy. This system helps to ensure its leadership among domestic OEMs in large-scale CFD collaborative simulation and ultra-low vehicle drag coefficient. For example, the drag coefficient of the recently launched GAC Trumpchi GS4 Coupe is only 0.295, which is far lower than that of comparative models in its vehicle segment.