liimimata
Liimimata is a term used in materials science to describe surfaces or materials that exhibit markedly reduced adhesion to other substances. The word is derived from the Estonian liim, meaning glue, with a negative form suffix -imata, effectively conveying "not sticky." In practice, liimimata materials are engineered to minimize contact and bonding with liquids or solids, enabling easy release or detachment.
The key characteristic of liimimata surfaces is low surface energy combined with deliberate surface texture. Many
Fabrication methods include chemical vapor deposition of low-energy polymers, grafting of silane-based monolayers, laser- or lithography-induced
Applications span release liners, anti-sticking surfaces in packaging and electronics assembly, medical devices where easy detachment
See also: anti-adhesive surfaces, low-surface-energy coatings, slippery liquid-infused porous surfaces.