Lamination means a process applied to alloys metal plastics and other materials consistent in subjecting the material to the constriction action by a machine called a rolling mill made up of two conjugated cylinders fig 1 rotating in the opposite direction with the same peripheral speed so that the material is forced to assume a section corresponding to the free light that remains among the cylinders themselves.
Causes of lamination in steel.
Plate lamination in carbon steel happens when folds or layers of plates are rolled together into a single plate thickness.
The laminate will stick together but applying and bending force can cause it to delaminate.
These folds and layers do not bond together and will separate when metal is worked.
These strips are cut to shape to make laminations which are stacked together to form the laminated cores of transformers and the stator and rotor of electric motors.
Processing can create layers in materials such as steel formed by rolling and plastics and metals from 3d printing which can fail from layer separation.
The wrong temperature impurities etc.
Lamination in carbon steel plates can occur within the body of a plate or at edges.
Rolled steel bar stock is made by rolling and rerolling steel billets until the desired shape and dimensions are attained.
Laminations are an imperfection in a steel or alloy resulting from blisters seams foreign material and or scratches on an ingot or billet that are not repaired during the rolling process.
Can cause a poor weld to be made.
A variety of materials including laminate composites and concrete can fail by delamination.
Electrical steel is usually manufactured in cold rolled strips less than 2 mm thick.
Laminations may be cut to their finished shape by a punch and die.