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&请教英国《Materials at High Temperatures》 期刊的投稿格式规范,谢谢!
请教英国《Materials at High Temperatures》 期刊的投稿格式规范,谢谢!
作者 xtian1
小弟有一篇文章想投英国的《Materials at High peratures》
第一次投稿,网上下载了该期刊的文章,但是都是PDF的,无法看出格式。
自己没找到该杂志的规范,劳烦大伙能帮忙找下或指导。。。
不胜感激!
学术论文还是很严谨的,千万不能找国内的非专业人员润色,弄不好误事又伤人。还有就是口碑和信任,有了口碑和信任才会有回头客,用过的人才会推荐给同事。专业君论文 我用了5次了,基本都不错,有次还跟英国的专家交流专业问题。
Authors should refer to detailed information on style conventions and figure preparation when preparing their manuscript. They are advised to consult a recent issue of the .
File formats
Prepare the manuscript as a text file (in Word, rtf or an equivalent format). Separate high resolution files of each figure will be required.
LaTeX2e files will generally be acceptable but support for submission of LaTeX2e documents is not provided.
Text formatting
The text should be in single column format. Use 12 pt font size and standard fonts.
There is no need to format to a specific plate. Use hard returns only at the end of paragraphs, switch autohyphenation off, and do not justify text. Do format italic or bold type and sub- and superscripts where necessary.
Be consistent in spacing, punctuation, and spelling. You are strongly advised to use the ‘spell-check’ and ‘grammar-check’ functions of your word processor.
Ensure that Greek symbols are used where appropriate and that similar characters, e.g. l (‘el’) and 1 (‘one’) or O (‘oh’) and 0 (‘zero’), are distinguished and correctly keyed.
Section headings
Divide your manuscript into clearly defined and numbered sections. Sections should be numbered (1, then 1.1, 1.2, and then, 1.1.1, 1.1.2) and be given a brief heading. Note that the numbering is for guidance to the typesetter and will generally not appear in the published version.
Article structure
Follow this order when preparing research papers: title, authors, affiliations, corresponding author, abstract, keywords, (list of symbols), main text, acknowledgements, appendix, references, figure and table captions, figures, tables and supplementary data.
Title: be concise, accurate and informative. Titles are often used by search engines and information retrieval syss. They should contain words that readers might be searching for. Avoid abbreviations and formulae where possible.
Author names and affiliations: provide the full name, affiliations (where the actual work was done) and contact details for all authors. Highlight the family name and clarify where author names are ambiguous e.g. double names. Present the authors’ affiliations and contact details below the names. Indicate with a superscript numeral immediately after the author’s name and in front of the appropriate affiliation.
Corresponding author: indicate who will handle correspondence at all stages of the refereeing process and post-publication. Include an email address, postal address and phone number (with country and area code). The corresponding author is responsible for keeping this information up to date.
Abstract: a concise staent (maximum 150 words) of the aims of the research, the work carried out and the conclusions. The abstract must be self-contained. Do not include general or background information, which should appear in the introduction, abbreviations or references. Include keywords from the title and for the subject area to improve online searching.
Keywords: include up to eight keywords to be used for indexing and online searching. Keywords should describe the content of the article and include key phrases for the subject area. Avoid general terms.
List of symbols: a list of symbols should be provided if helpful to the reader.
Introduction: a summary of current knowledge including a literature survey of previous work in the field, together with a staent of the aims and motivation of the present work.
Experimental methods: the methods employed must be described in sufficient detail to allow others to repeat the work. If a detailed description is given in a reference, readers must be able to grasp the principles of the method without referring elsewhere. Full details must be given of materials and equipment used.
Results and discussion: presented together or as separate sections. Papers must critically discuss and interpret the results, not merely describe the findings. Duplication of data in tables and figures is strongly discouraged, as is excessive use of figures: resentative or significant results should be selected. Additional information may be provided as supplementary data. For simple datasets, tables provide a more effective and concise means of presentation than figures. Include standard errors or error bars whenever relevant, and report results to appropriate numbers of significant figures.
Conclusions: give a concise summary of the important findings. The conclusions must not contain information that does not appear elsewhere in the paper.
Acknowledgements: provide details of individuals and institutions who have contributed to the work and information required by funding bodies etc. The acknowledgements may also include copyright information that is too extensive to include elsewhere, and other information (such as the fact that the paper is based on a lecture or conference presentation).
Appendices: use to provide additional information, tables or mathematical derivations. References in appendices should be combined with those in the main text into a single list. Tables and figure are numbered A1, A2, A3, ...
References: provide a complete list of the literature cited in the paper tailored to the journal’s readership. Format references according to the journal style.
Figure and table captions: ensure each figure and table has a caption. Supply captions separately at the end of the manuscript. A caption should comprise a brief title (not on the figure itself) and a description. Keep text in the figure to a minimum but explain all symbols and abbreviations used.
Figures: separate high resolution files of each figure will be required. Prepare figures according to the preparation guidelines. Do not embed figures in the manuscript text. If a figure is roduced or adapted from other work, this must be made clear in the caption and a reference cited, together with any other acknowledgements requested by the copyright holder, see the permissions section for further information.
Tables: number tables consecutively in accordance with their appearance in the text. Avoid vertical rules. Tables may be placed in the text or collected together at the end of the paper. Tables should not be prepared as image files, see the style conventions section for further information.
Supplementary material: additional material (e.g. datasets, models, animations or videos) that enhances the content and impact of articles. Supplementary material is intended to support arguments adv it must not refer to other work nor contain discussion or conclusions that go beyond the content of the article. See detailed instructions for submission and presentation of supplementary material.&&
Figure preparation
Authors should refer to the style conventions for details of figure caption preparation.
File formats and resolution
Authors must provide separate, high resolution, digital files for each figure in their manuscript. Acceptable file formats are TIFF, JPEG and EPS. Figures embedded in Word documents are not suitable for roduction. If supplying EPS files ensure that all fonts are attached.
Authors should note the following requirements:
•Images should be saved at a resolution of at least 600 dpi at final size (dpi=dot 600 dpi=240 dots per centimetre). Do not save at the default resolution (72dpi).
•Crop unwanted white space from around the figure before sizing.
•Halftones (photographs) should be supplied as greyscale images.
•Line drawings or diagrams should be scanned as line art or produced to the appropriate resolution using a software drawing package. Ensure lines are a minimum of 0.3pt in width.
•Diagrams with shaded or toned areas or line/tone figures should be submitted as greyscale images.
•Colour figures for printing should be provided in CMYK format.
•Colour figures for online use only should be provided in RGB format. In some instances a reduced resolution of 72dpi at final size may be acceptable for these figures.
Manipulation of images to enhance, obscure or remove individual features is not permitted. Adjustment of brightness, contrast or colour balance may be applied to the entire image provided the result does not mislead the viewer. Significant digital manipulation of images must be acknowledged in the figure caption.
Figure size and legibility
In general, figures will be sized to single column width (80mm) or page width (168mm). Ensure the labelling on figures will be legible when reduced to final size. Lettering should be approximately 8pt in size (equivalent to 2mm in height for capital letters) at final width (i.e. figures that are wider before being reduced require larger lettering).
Ensure that curves on multiple plots are clear at final size, in particular that any symbols used on graphs can be distinguished. Labelling of individual curves may be preferable to keys in these circumstances.
Axis labels should be of the form: Stress / MPa; Velocity (v) / m s-1; log(L / nm)
Permissions
Written permission must be obtained to roduce any illustrations for which the authors do not own the copyright. Further information is available in the permission section.
Supplementary material
Supplementary material gives authors the opportunity to enhance their work by including material that cannot be included in an article for reasons of space, is of very specific interest, or is not compatible with the standard journal format (e.g. audio or video files, animations, software, models, or large datasets).
Supplementary material is intended to support arguments adv it should not refer to other work nor contain discussion or conclusions that go beyond the content of the article. The inclusion of supplementary material is at the discretion of the Editor whose decision on its relevance and appropriateness is final.
Supplementary data should be referred to in the main text, but must be self-contained and supplied as separate files.
Supplementary material will be published online and linked to and from the article. It is considered to form an integral part of the article and will be peer reviewed and subject to the same ethical standards, warranties and conditions of submission. Authors will be required to sign a copyright transfer form and provide the same warranties in respect of supplementary material as for the article itself.
To assure continuity of access and effective archiving, supplementary files will be published on Maney’s online platform, unless the data appear in an open access database such as GEO or CIF or a widely recognised subject based repository. It is not acceptable to link to files held on personal or other websites.
In preparing an article:
•ensure each supplementary file is referred to at the appropriate point in the manuscript using the style: (Supplementary Material 1), (Supplementary Material 2), ...
•provide a separate document giving the title and a brief description of each supplementary file, plus detailed captions for non-text files (figures, video, audio, software, datasets, ...)
•distinguish supplementary tables, figures and references using the numbering sys S1, S2, S3, ...
Supplementary material must be self-contained, i.e. capable of being understood without reference to other material. Supplementary files are not edited and may not be typeset. It is the responsibility of the authors to ensure the content is correct, consistent with the article itself, consistent with journal style and self-contained. CrossRef reference linking may not be active the use of additional references in the supplementary files should therefore be kept to a minimum.
Large files should be compressed where possible. When uploading online, ensure the correct category is chosen for each supplementary file. The list and description will be included within the PDF file accessed by the editor or referee. All other supplementary files will be hyperlinked from the PDF file. The maximum individual file size for uploads is 30MB. Contact the journal office if you wish to include files in excess of this size.
Style conventions
The full author guide contains detailed examples of the journal style.
When preparing final files for submission, format italic or bold type and sub- and superscripts. If using different levels of section heading, number each section to indicate the level (1, 1.1, 1.1.1, etc.) – but note that the numbering will not appear in the typeset proof.
Be as consistent as possible in punctuation and spelling and ensure that similar characters, e.g. l (‘el’) and 1 (‘one’) or O (‘oh’) and 0 (‘zero’), are correctly keyed.
Spelling follows UK English rather than US English, and ‘s’ rather than ‘z’ where there is an option, e.g. ‘standardise’, ‘analyse’, not ‘standardize’, ‘analyze’. (Original spelling is retained in company names, patented processes, book titles, etc.). Further examples are given in Appendix 1 of the full author guide.
Hyphenation
Use hyphens only if omitting them causes ambiguity. Hyphens are generally used:
• after the prefixes ‘post-’, ‘non-’, ‘self-’, ‘cross-’, and ‘quasi-’ and before the suffixes ‘-off’ and ‘-up’
• to avoid double vowels or consonants in compound words, e.g. ‘electro-optics’, ‘cross-section’, or ambiguity, e.g. ‘re-cover’/‘recover’, ‘re-solution’/‘resolution’
• in compositions: ‘wt-%’, ‘vol.-%’, ‘at.-%’, ‘area-%’, ‘mol-%’
• in combinations or ranges (as en rules or dashes): Fe–4Ni–2Cu, stress–strain curve, 1–10.
Quotation marks
Use ‘single quotation’ marks in the first instance and “double quotation” marks for quotes within quotes. Direct quotations must retain the original text, spelling and punctuation.
Use colons for numerical ratios (3:2) and obliques with words (surface/volume ratio).
Abbreviations
Abbreviations, contractions and acronyms may be helpful, but break the flow if the reader is not familiar with them. Restrict their use where possible. Do not use abbreviations (other than chemical symbols) in the title, abstract or conclusions. Always define an abbreviation on first use.
Abbreviations (where text has been removed from the end of the word) are followed by a full point, e.g. ‘dia.’, ‘Co.’.
Contractions (where text is removed from within a word) are not, e.g. ‘Dr’, ‘Jpn’, ‘Ltd’. A plural has a full point if the singular does (e.g. ‘Figs.’).
Acronyms or abbreviations of phrases do not take full points (e.g. , NATO).
Variables, functions and symbols
Variables appear in italic type: ‘pressure P and perature T’. Mathematical functions (exp, log, f(x), sin) appear in upright text. Do not use the same symbols for more than one variable: use upper and lower case or script characters as alternatives.
Include a list of symbols before the start of the main text if this will be helpful to the reader.
Numbers, ranges and dates
Spell out whole numbers ween one and nine (inclusive) 10 and over appear as numerals. Numbers are always spelt out at the beginning of sentences. Numbers attached to units always appear as numerals. For exponential form, use 8.15x10-5, not 8.15E–5 or 8.15E-5.
A full point, not a comma, is used as a separator in decimals (3.1416).
Give ranges of numbers in full: 111–116 not 111–6; in references A3–A6 not A3–6.
Give date ranges as 98–2002 and historical dates as AD410, 55BC (AD and BC small caps). For calendar dates: 1 June
August 1955.
Chemical elements and compositions
Chemical elements may be spelt out or expressed as symbols, but symbols are preferred in compositions, tables, figure captions, and (generally) titles of articles.
Make clear (e.g. on first use) whether compositions are atomic, weight, molar or volume per cent: use the forms 5%, 5 at.-%, 5 wt-%, 5 mol-%, 5 vol.-% as appropriate.
Present compositions with two or more components with en rules (dashes) ween each element, e.g. Fe–30Cr–14Ni–2Cu. For composites, use a solidus to separate components, e.g. Al–2Cu/SiCw, W–Ni–Cu/WC, PP/Cf (where f, p, and w refer to re, particulate, and whisker reinforcement respectively).
Trade names/registered trademarks
Use initial capitals for trade names, e.g. Inconel, Carbolite, Kevlar, not INCONEL, CARBOLITE, KEVLAR. The registered trade name&/trademark™ symbols is used only on first mention.
Equations in Word 2007
Refer to equations in text as ‘equation (1)’ etc. It is not obligatory to number all equations.
Equations generated in Word 2007 cannot be used for typesetting because they are stored as images. Papers that include equations must be prepared in Word 2007 compatibility mode (.doc files) or by using MathType software to set the equations. Compatibility mode should be used from the outset: it is not possible to convert equations retrospectively. In compatibility mode, use the menu options Insert & Object & Microsoft Equation 3.0 to access the equation editor. The editor can be used for both displayed and inline equations, but inline equations must be on one line only.
Figures and figure captions
Number figures consecutively in a single sequence. All figures must be referred to, in order, in the text. Refer to the figure preparation guidelines for detailed information on presentation and sizing of figures.
Where possible, results should be discussed in the text not in the caption, although extended captions may be used to describe micrographs or complex figures.
Examples of style for captions and subcaptions are (note that subcaptions appear ween the main caption and the figure):
a 723 K; b 823 K; c 873 K
4 Morphology of precipitates and corresponding martensitic plates containing fine precipitates after 15% deformation and aging at given perature x500
5 Critical transformation peratures for H12 high speed steel at a high (30 K s-1 and b moderate (10 K s-1) cooling rates following austenitisation
Format tables using the Word table function, not tabs or the space bar. Embed tables within the manuscript, do not supply tables as image files. Where headings refer to more than on column or row, indicate this by merging the cell in question:
Table 2 Experimental sintering conditions
&&Sintering perature/°C& &&&
Specimen Min Max Time at
perature/min Cooling rate/
1 980 995 30 12
Use an ellipsis (…) rather than dash (–) for absent is. The number of significant figures/decimal places to which values are reported should be consistent and reflect the accuracy of the measurement. Include standard errors where relevant.
Use of SI units is mandatory (an excellent guide to units and their use is provided by NIST).
For compound units, use negative indexes, not obliques: W m-1 K-1, not W/m.K.
Supplementary SI units (e.g. atmosphere, centimetre, angstrom, litre, celsius, hour, etc.) are acceptable. Use L as the abbreviation for litre, not l.
If non-SI units are used (e.g. in areas where non-standard units are the norm), give a conversion factor at first use or actual conversions in parentheses throughout the text. Figures should not generally be presented in non-SI units, but if this has been agreed with the Editor a conversion must be given in the figure caption.
For hardness units, use HV for Vickers (HV30, HV(50 g) to indicate load), HK for Knoop, HB for Brinell and HR for Rockwell (HRA, HRB, HRC).
Use mm/year or mm/day, not abbreviations (y, d).
Where numbers on figure axes or in tables are dimensionless, the labelling should take the form: Pressure/MPa, Current density/A m-2, etc.
References
Number references consecutively through the text, citing them as superscripts, outside punctuation (as reported previously.1,2–6). A complete numerical list of references should be given at the end of the paper.
Examples of reference types are as follows:
1.M. Lukaszewicz, N. J. Simms, T. Dudziak and J. R. Nicholls: ‘Characterisation of oxide scales developed on high perature resisting alloys in pure steam environments’, Mater. High p., 1–218.
2.H. K. D. H. Bhadeshia: ‘Bainite in steels’, 2nd edn, Vol. 1, 240–249; 2001, London, Maney.
3.L. F. Pease III and D. L. Pease: ‘Metallography of powder metallurgy materials’, in ‘ASM handbook’, 8th edn, Vol. 7, ‘Powder metal technologies and applications’, (ed. W.B. Eisen et al.), 719–748; 1990, Materials Park, OH, ASM International.
4.M. Loretto and R. Smith: ‘Spray deposition of high molybdenum nickel alloys’, Proc. 3rd Int. Conf. on ‘Research and development in net shape manufacturing’, Birmingham, UK, March 1999, University of Birmingham, Paper 23.
5.R. C. Fry: ‘Diffusion in transition metal carbides’, PhD thesis, University of Alabama, Birmingham, AL, USA, .
6.R. D. Nicholson: ‘Interfacial structures in nickel-based joints after long term service’, Report RD/M/N1131, Central Electricity Generating Board, Marchwood, UK, 1980.
7.Koichi Fukuda, Aiki Tomofumi, and Osamu Yoshida, Frontec Inc.: ‘Method of sputtering a silicon nitride film’, US Patent 5550091, published 27 August 1996,
引用回帖:: Originally posted by tongji_fubo at
Authors should refer to detailed information on style conventions and figure preparation when preparing their manuscript. They are advised to consult a recent issue of the .
File formats
... 十分感谢!
另还请劳烦能附上以上格式规范的原网页地址么?感激不尽!
个人觉得对于自己没有把握的前进行论文是比较靠谱的。因为经过润色编校,使我稿件的接收率提高。一定程度上减少投稿时间,确保文章符合期刊要求,投稿过程比较顺利。
这个期刊我投了一篇文章,“中”这个状态已经5月约了,都快疯了。。谨慎啊。
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