The Novel Materials Discovery Laboratory
Acronym
NoMaD
Description of the granted funding
Essentially every new commercial product, be they smart phones, solar cells, batteries, transport technology, artificial hips, etc., depends on improved or even novel materials. Computational materials science is increasingly influential as a method to identify such critical materials for both R&D. Enormous amounts of data, precious but heterogeneous and difficult to access or utilise, are already stored in repositories scattered across Europe. The NoMaD CoE will open new HPC opportunities by enabling access to this data and delivering powerful new tools to search, retrieve and manage it.
NoMaD will foster sharing of all relevant data, building on the unique CECAM, Psi-k and ETSF communities, putting Europe ahead of materials science in other continents. Unprecedented, already initialised networking with researchers, with industry, with students and with other stakeholders will guarantee relevance and end-user value. NoMaD will become a crucial tool for atomistic simulations and multi-scale modelling in the physical, materials, and quantum-chemical sciences. This field is characterised by a healthy but heterogeneous eco-system of many different codes that are used at all HPC centers worldwide, with millions of CPU hours spent every day, some of them at petascale performance. NoMaD will integrate the leading codes and make their results comparable by converting (and compressing) existing inputs and outputs into a common format, thus making these valuable data accessible to academia and industry:
NoMaD will develop “big-data analytics” for materials science. This will require novel algorithms, e.g., for statistical learning based on the created materials encyclopedia, offering complex searches and novel visualisations. These challenges exploit the essential resources of our HPC partners. Without the infrastructure and services provided by the NoMaD CoE, much of the information created with the above mentioned petascale (towards exascale) computations would be wasted.
Show moreStarting year
2015
End year
2018
Granted funding
MAX-PLANCK-GESELLSCHAFT ZUR FORDERUNG DER WISSENSCHAFTEN EV (DE)
1 417 837.43 €
Coordinator
Nationalpark Bayericher Wald (DE)
205 500 €
Participant
THE CHANCELLOR, MASTERS AND SCHOLARS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE (UK)
145 531.25 €
Participant
PINTAIL LTD (IE)
250 000 €
Participant
BAYERISCHE AKADEMIE DER WISSENSCHAFTEN (DE)
205 500 €
Participant
BARCELONA SUPERCOMPUTING CENTER - CENTRO NACIONAL DE SUPERCOMPUTACION (ES)
238 749.99 €
Participant
HUMBOLDT-UNIVERSITAET ZU BERLIN (DE)
561 929.83 €
Participant
KING'S COLLEGE LONDON (UK)
678 264.55 €
Participant
UNIVERSITAT DE BARCELONA (ES)
414 366.25 €
Participant
DANMARKS TEKNISKE UNIVERSITET (DK)
343 070.18 €
Participant
Amount granted
4 910 624 €
Funder
European Union
Funding instrument
Research and Innovation action
Framework programme
Horizon 2020 Framework Programme
Call
Programme part
EXCELLENT SCIENCE - Research Infrastructures (5226 Development, deployment and operation of ICT-based e-infrastructures (5230 )
Topic
Centres of Excellence for computing applications (EINFRA-5-2015Call ID
H2020-EINFRA-2015-1 Other information
Funding decision number
676580
Identified topics
materials, nanomaterials