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Researchers at the University of Birmingham are set to benefit from the largest IBM® POWER9™ Artificial Intelligence (AI) computer cluster in the UK.

The University will integrate a total of 11 IBM POWER9 systems into its existing high-performance computing (HPC) infrastructure, called the Birmingham Environment for Academic Research (BEAR).

The system will deliver unprecedented performance for the ever-increasing AI workloads generated by the University’s researchers, delivering ground-breaking computational vision analysis and helping to solve life sciences challenges, such as improving cancer diagnosis.

 “It’s very important to us as a research-led institution that we are at the forefront of data research which means we are always looking at ways to make AI quicker and more accessible for our researchers,” said Simon Thompson, Research Computing Infrastructure Architect at the University of Birmingham. “With the sheer amount of data, the common questions from researchers are how can we analyse it fast enough and how can we make the process even quicker? With our early deployment of the two IBM POWER9 servers we have seen what is possible. By scaling up, we can keep-pace with the escalating demand and offer the computational capacity and capability to attract leading researchers to the University.”

Birmingham initially deployed two IBM POWER9 Accelerated Compute Servers (AC922) powered by POWER9 CPUs and NVIDIA® NVLink™ interconnects in September 2018.

Working with OCF, the high-performance compute, storage and data analytics integrator,  the University will now add an additional nine IBM POWER9 AC922 warm water-cooled nodes with four NVIDIA Tesla® V100 16GB Tensor Core GPUs, 1TB of system memory, dual 18 core POWER9 CPUs and Mellanox® 100Gb EDR InfiniBand. The solution uses IBM PowerAI Enterprise software, unlocking potential for accelerated computing, capitalising on the largest IBM PowerAI cluster in the UK. IBM will also support use of the new systems by providing comprehensive training and support to Birmingham’s researchers in partnership with the University’s Advanced Research Computing Team (ARC).

This significant enhancement to BEAR will mean an even more powerful and versatile computing environment to serve researchers. For example, fellows from The Alan Turing Institute looking at early diagnosis of and new therapies for heart disease and cancer, will use AI to run faster diagnostics in the future. In contrast, researchers in the physical sciences are similarly using machine learning and data science approaches to quantify the 4D (3D plus time) microstructures of advanced materials collected at national large synchrotron facilities such as the Diamond Light Source. This research expects to use the large model support provided by IBM PowerAI software to analyse TBs of data being generated daily; currently an almost impossible task.

Professor Tim Softley, Pro-Vice-Chancellor for Research and Knowledge Transfer at the University of Birmingham, said: “Having outstanding facilities is essential to  our delivery of research that matters. This investment in new infrastructure and our growing partnership with IBM will benefit all disciplines but is particularly relevant to our  exciting research into artificial intelligence and our partnership with the Alan Turing Institute”

Professor Jean-Baptiste Cazier from the Institute of Cancer and Genomic Sciences, said: “Access to this technology and expertise from IBM will enable us to leverage the best of capabilities in Data Science and deploy to a range of domains from Precision Medicine to Environmental studies."

“We’re delighted to work with the University on this initiative,” said Julian Fielden, Managing Director of OCF. “AI workloads are driving data intensive challenges that can only be met with accelerated infrastructure, such as IBM’s POWER9. The University is leading the way with this impressive project and will continue to attract world-class researchers with this type of innovation.”

Energy efficiency is also key and the University has shown its commitment by investing to reduce energy consumption. The University boasts the UK’s first purpose built water-cooled research focused datacentre meaning that 85% of the heat is recovered directly through the water-cooled systems, delivering impressive energy savings by minimising the cooling overheads. The top end range of IBM POWER9 AC922 servers includes warm water-cooled nodes, where water is taken directly across the CPUs and GPUs at temperatures up to 35C. A unique installation in the UK, the data centre doesn’t use any air-cooling systems and accommodates the IBM systems running alongside “direct to node” water cooled technology from other vendors.

Thompson concludes: “With OCF as our partner, we have the right guidance, skills and expertise to continually move BEAR forward. It’s not just about having the largest cluster, it’s about providing cutting-edge HPC tools for our researchers from both traditional and non-traditional disciplines, who will be able to process data faster and generate new findings, achieving greater research impact.”

For media enquiries contact Beck Lockwood, Communications Manager (Science and Technology), University of Birmingham, or tel: +44 (0) 121 414 42772, or contact the press office out of hours on +44 (0) 7789 921 165.

IBM is a registered trademark and POWER9 a trademark, both of International Business Machines Corporation (“IBM”). NVIDIA, NVLink and Tesla are trademarks or registered trademarks of NVIDIA. Mellanox is a registered trade mark of Mellanox Technologies.