Unidirectional flow is the simplest phenomenon of fluid mechanics. Its
mathematical description, the Dirichlet problem for Poisson's equation in two
dimensions with constant forcing, arises in many physical contexts, such as the
torsion of elastic beams, first solved by de Saint-Venant for complex shapes.
Here, the literature is unified and extended by identifying seventeen physical
analogies for unidirectional flow and describing their common mathematical
structure. Besides classical analogies in fluid and solid mechanics,
applications are discussed in stochastic processes (first passage in two
dimensions), pattern formation (river growth by erosion), and electrokinetics
(ion transport in nanochannels), which also involve Poisson's equation with
non-constant forcing. Methods are given to construct approximate geometries
that admit exact solutions, by adding harmonic functions to quadratic forms or
by truncating eigenfunction expansions. Exact solutions for given geometries
are also derived by conformal mapping. We prove that the remarkable geometrical
interpretation of Poiseuille flow in an equilateral triangular pipe (the
product of the distances from an interior point to the sides) is only shared by
parallel plates and unbounded equilateral wedges (with the third side hidden
behind the apex). We also prove Onsager reciprocity for linear electrokinetic
phenomena in straight pores of arbitrary shape and surface charge, based on the
mathematics of unidirectional flow.Comment: now 17 analogies, 100 ref