interlamination

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

inter- +‎ lamination

Noun[edit]

interlamination (countable and uncountable, plural interlaminations)

  1. The state or process of being interlaminated.
    • 1955, United States Steel Corporation, Electrical Steel Sheets, page 224:
      Interlamination resistance is of interest in laminated core structures as the flow of eddy currents between laminations is a function of this resistance.
    • 1962, Alfred H. Chidester, Petrology and Geochemistry of Selected Talc-Bearing Ultramafic Rock and Adjacent Country Rocks in North-Central Vermont, page 48:
      The transitions are by rather uniform and gradual changes in the relative abundance of minerals in the component layers and by small-scale interlamination of layers of markedly different composition; gradation by gradual change is perhaps predominant.
    • 2006, Danillo Makuc, Makx Berlec, Konrad Lenasi, “Investigation of ELCID Testing Using FEM Analysis and Test Core Measurements”, in Andrzej Krawczyk, Sławomir Wiak, Xose M. Lopez-Fernandez, editors, Electromagnetic Fields in Mechatronics, Electrical and Electronic Engineering, page 199:
      Interlamination faults were also simulated and analysed using FEM.
    • 2014, P.S. Liu, G.F. Chen, Porous Materials: Processing and Applications, page 260:
      The pore sizes of the heterogeneous PCHs are between the microsized zeolite (with a pore size of less than 1 nm) and mesosized materials (with pre sizes of 2-50 nm), so that the heavy oil, biological molecules, and other macromolecules can enter the interlamination of PCHs for processing and selective catalysis.