Nanolamination is like making a sandwich really, really small. In a sandwich, you have bread on the outside and yummy stuff in the middle, right? With nanolamination, we use really thin layers of materials instead of bread, and we put them on top of each other to make something really strong and cool.
Imagine you have a piece of paper, and you fold it in half. Then you fold it in half again, and again, and again. Soon, you have a really thick stack of paper, right? That's kind of like what nanolamination is. We take really thin layers of material, like plastic or metal, and stack them on top of each other over and over again until we have something really strong and cool.
These layers of material are so thin that we need really special machines to make them. Even though they're thin, when we stack them up, they become very strong and resistant to wear and tear. This makes them very useful in things like electronics, where we need things to be both tough and small.
So, nanolamination is just like making a sandwich with really thin layers of material that are stacked on top of each other to make something really strong and cool!