bulkstroming
Bulkstroming is a term used in engineering and physical sciences to describe the large-scale, organized transport of material within a medium, driven by bulk forces such as pressure gradients, gravity, or external fields. It denotes net advective motion of constituents and contrasts with diffusion, which is driven by random molecular motion. The term is used in several domains, including fluid dynamics, sediment transport, and microfluidics, but it does not have a single universally accepted definition.
Mechanisms and contexts: Bulkstroming arises when bulk forces generate a persistent flow pattern that transports substances
Modeling: In continuum models, bulkstroming is represented by the velocity field solving the Navier–Stokes equations or
Applications: The concept informs the design of piping and pumping systems, microfluidic devices for sample handling,
Challenges: Measuring and predicting bulkstroming can be difficult due to scale separation, complex boundary conditions, and
See also: bulk flow, advection, convection, acoustic streaming, sediment transport, microfluidics.