avflaking
Avflaking is a failure mode in layered materials in which fragments of a surface coating or top layer detach as flakes from the substrate. The term is used in materials science and coatings engineering to describe coarse-scale delamination and shedding that can occur under mechanical stress, thermal cycling, moisture ingress, or UV exposure. The process typically begins at an interface where adhesion is weakest, such as between the substrate and the first coating, or within a coating layer that has internal defects or residual stresses. Once initiated, cracks propagate laterally, producing visible flakes that can vary in size from a few micrometers to several millimeters. The phenomenon is distinct from uniform wear or pigment powdering because it involves discrete fragments and delamination across a surface.
Avflaking is commonly observed in protective paints and polymer coatings on metal or composite substrates, in
Prevention strategies center on improving interfacial adhesion and coating performance: proper surface pretreatment, choosing compatible coating