Bond strength between two polymers depends on the degree to which the polymers chains can entangle across the boundary between the two polymers. Important factors are:
1. Time of contact, longer contact time in the melt gives time for entanglement and improves bond strength
2. Compatibility of the polymers. As a crude estimation look at the polarity or better the solubility parameters for each polymer (available on the web or in the Polymer Handbook). Polymers of similar polarity will mix and give good bond strength.
3. Molecular weight. High molecular weight will give better bond strength if you give it enough time for entanglement. Lower molecular weigh can diffuse faster so it may give better bond strength for short melt contact times.
4. Temperature. High temperature increases polymer mobility, allowing entanglements to form and thereby improving strength.
5. Impurities. Low molecular weight additives like antioxidants and stearates can decrease strength by collecting at the interface and forming a weak boundary layer (low molecular weight additives cannot entangle and have no strength).
6. Compatibilizer. You can add a block copolmer where each of the two blocks is soluble in one of the polymers to be co-extruded. The compatibilizer can span the boundary and entangle with each phase, improving strength.
7. Use a tie-layer, i.e. a polymer of intermediate polarity co-extruded in a thin layer between the two other polymers to be bonded.
For a book that explains this very well, with data, see...
Polymer Interface and Adhesion by Souheng WU
ISBN 0-8247-1533-0
Chris DeArmitt
"Knowledge has no value except that which can be gained from its application toward some worthwhile end."
Think and Grow Rich - Napoleon Hill