Lamabilité
Lamabilité, sometimes rendered as laminability, is the property of a material that governs its ability to form a stable laminated structure with one or more layers through adhesive bonding, heat, and pressure. In practice, lamabilité describes how well a substrate accepts an adhesive and remains bonded under service conditions, without interfacial failures such as delamination or adhesive failure.
The concept is used across fields such as packaging, wood and veneer products, polymer films, electronics substrates,
Key factors influencing lamabilité include surface energy and cleanliness, surface roughness, chemical compatibility between substrate and
Assessment methods commonly used to evaluate lamabilité involve adhesion and interfacial strength tests, such as peel
Improvement strategies focus on surface pretreatment (e.g., plasma or corona treatment), priming or coupling agents, and
Terminology varies, and lamabilité is not uniformly standardized across industries. It is often discussed alongside related