Mechanical properties of two polymers in 
                                    a blend or alloy would depend upon their compatibility 
                                    or the level of interfacial forces. High adhesion 
                                    can only be obtained if the interface can 
                                    sustain sufficient stress to induce dissipative 
                                    forms of deformation such as flow, yield or 
                                    crazing in the polymer. Under most circumstances, 
                                    such deformation modes can only be obtained 
                                    when the interface is coupled with a sufficient 
                                    density of covalent bonds, together with perhaps 
                                    some toughening effects due to surface roughness. 
                                    
                                    
                                    Most thermoplastics gain their strength from 
                                    entanglement between the chains. The polymer 
                                    chains form an entangled network that cannot 
                                    pull apart when the material is in the glassy 
                                    or semi-crystalline state. Instead, under 
                                    stress, the whole network deforms and then 
                                    strain hardens as the chains become stretched. 
                                    Fracture requires scission of these covalently 
                                    bonded chains. To form strong polymer-polymer 
                                    adhesion it is necessary for the network to 
                                    be continuous across the interface. This continuity 
                                    can be formed by:
                                    * Inter diffusion of chains if the two polymers 
                                    are sufficiently miscible
                                    * Use of coupling chains placed at the interface
                                    * Chemical reaction to form coupling chains 
                                    at the interface 
                                  Di block copolymers are used commercially 
                                    for the coupling between phases within polymer 
                                    blends. 
                                    The form of coupling has been found to depend 
                                    on the molecular weight of the coupling chains. 
                                    Short chains can pull out of the bulk material 
                                    at a force that increases with the length 
                                    of the pulled-out section. As the length of 
                                    the chains increases to somewhere between 
                                    one and four times, the length required to 
                                    from an entanglement in the melt, the force 
                                    required for pullout, becomes greater than 
                                    the force to break chains, so they fail by 
                                    scission. The extent of adhesion is strongly 
                                    affected by the molecular failure mechanism 
                                    as tough interfaces are normally only obtained 
                                    when the failure is by scission. Scission 
                                    failure alone does not ensure a tough interface.
                                    
                                    A common technique to couple two bulk polymers 
                                    is to introduce into one or both of the materials 
                                    a small percentage of chemically modified 
                                    chains that can react with the other polymer 
                                    to form coupling chains at the interface. 
                                    A classic example of this technique is the 
                                    introduction into Polypropylene of some Maleic 
                                    anhydride grafted Polypropylene chains to 
                                    induce coupling with a Polyamide such as Nylon 
                                    6. The maleic anhydride functionality can 
                                    react with hydroxyl end groups on the Polyamide 
                                    chain to form a graft or block copolymer at 
                                    the interface. The molecular mechanism of 
                                    interfacial failure can again be either pullout 
                                    or scission of these coupling chains. Pullout 
                                    at low force can occur if either one of the 
                                    blocks in the copolymer formed at the interface 
                                    is rather short or if there are too many coupling 
                                    chains at the interface. 
                                    In the Polyamide-Polypropylene example, where 
                                    typically there are very few grafts per Polypropylene 
                                    chain, pullout is only expected if the grafted 
                                    Polypropylene chain is rather short which 
                                    can easily happen as the grafting process 
                                    tends to cause scission. The Polyamide chain 
                                    is typical of bulk material and so has a molecular 
                                    weight well above the entanglement molecular 
                                    weight to give the material a useful cohesive 
                                    toughness.
                                    In other systems, when multiple grafts are 
                                    possible on a single chain, then the coupling 
                                    chains can become so densely packed at the 
                                    interface that they exclude other chains and 
                                    so cannot entangle well with the bulk material, 
                                    causing pullout failure. This situation has 
                                    been observed when the chains themselves were 
                                    long enough to entangle.
                                    
                                    Coupling by chain inter diffusion can occur 
                                    if the two polymeric materials are miscible 
                                    in each other, or at least sufficiently miscible 
                                    to form a broad interface. Welding is the 
                                    most common form of inter diffusion but chain 
                                    inter diffusion is also important in solvent 
                                    bonding.