Author Instructions
Table of Contents
Format Needed for Initial Submissions
Preparing Your Author Declaration Section
Preparing Your Data Availability Statement
Using Supplementary Material in Your Manuscript
Using Multimedia in Your Manuscript
Guidelines for Using Chinese, Japanese, and Korean Names
Additional Journal Specific Instructions
Chemical Physics Reviews (CPR)
International Journal of Fluid Engineering (IJFE)
The Journal of Chemical Physics (JCP)
The Journal of Mathematical Physics (JMP)
Journal of Physical and Chemical Reference Data (JPCRD)
Nanotechnology and Precision Engineering (NPE)
The Journal of Renewable and Sustainable Energy (JRSE)
Preparing Your Manuscript
These are general guidelines for preparing your paper for submission. There are also journal-specific requirements given below.
Acceptable File Formats
Please use either Microsoft Word® or LaTeX.
Microsoft Word Users
Equations – Use the built-in Microsoft® Equation Editor of Mathtype to insert math, since it needs to be editable.
- If using Mathtype, check the system requirements here.
- Windows users, please embed all fonts.
- Mac users, save all files in “DOCX” format. Use fonts available from basic installation.
Tables – Use Word’s “Insert Table” function for proper typesetting.
Figures – Follow the information in the Preparing Your Graphics section.
LaTeX Users
Template – Use the formatted AIP Publishing template in Overleaf for best results and full support. Authors submitting to JMP should use this template in Overleaf.
- Download either the PDF template (best for initial submissions) or the .zip containing the template, which can then be uploaded to the submission system.
Template Support –
- Support with using the AIP Publishing template is provided by Overleaf.
- If you did not use the template and are experiencing LaTeX issues, upload your project into AIP Publishing template in Overleaf for support.
- If you use are not using the template, you can seek support from community-help based forums, i.e., tex.stackexchange.com or http://latex.org/forum/.
Figures – Follow the information in the Preparing Your Graphics section.
Format Needed for Initial Submissions
- Submit a single, compiled manuscript pdf.
- If you have supplementary material (SM), please include it as a separate SM pdf.
English-Language Editing
- To improve the quality of your written English so editors, reviewers, and readers can fully understand your research, AIP Publishing recommends that authors use AIP Author Services.
- Using this service is not a requirement or a guarantee of acceptance for review or publication.
General Manuscript Guidelines
These are the general guidelines for the AIP Publishing journals. If you are submitting to ADV- MMM, AML, APL, APB, APM, APP, APR, AQS, BPR, BMF, BPR, CHA, CPR, JCP, JPCRD, POF, POP, RSE, RSI, or SDY, there are additional requirements that apply to each journal. Please read the section “Specific Journal Guidelines” below after reading this section.
Essentials
- The manuscript needs to be in good, scientific, American English.
- Your motivation for the research presented, central results, and conclusion should be stated in nontechnical language for a broad audience.
- Authors should present their names in the same way across publications.
- Your abstract should not contain displayed equations, footnotes, references, graphics, or tables. It should be one paragraph of 250 words providing a summary of the new information, results of general interest, and conclusions.
Formatting
Manuscript Order
- Your manuscript should be arranged in the following order: Title, author(s), affiliation(s), abstract, text, conclusion, supplementary material section, acknowledgments, author declarations section (conflict of interest, ethics approval, and author contributions), data availability statement, appendixes (if any), and references.
- All pages should be numbered consecutively.
Equations
- Displayed equations should be punctuated, aligned to bring out their structure, and numbered on the right-hand side.
- Multi-line continued equations should have the operator placed at the beginning of the next line.
- Except for scalar products of vectors, use “x” and not a center dot.
- A solidus (/) should be used for built-up fractions in text and in displayed math.
- Math font use should be consistent throughout the paper.
- For complicated exponents, use “exp.”
- Notation needs to be clear and consistent with standard use.
Footnotes
- Footnotes to the title should be set as a “Note” above affiliation footnotes.
- Footnotes to the affiliations should be labeled as a), b), c), etc.
- Footnotes in text are not permitted. You can either add that information into the text or in the references list.
Figures
- All figures should be embedded in the text. Follow the information in the Preparing Your Graphics section.
- Figures should have a caption and be cited in text and numbered consecutively, i.e., 1, 2, 3, etc.
Tables
- Tables should be embedded in the text.
- Tables should have a caption and be cited in text and numbered consecutively, i.e., I, II, III, etc.
- Footnotes in tables should be labeled as a), b), c), etc.
- Units should be noted in column headings.
- If using bold font to emphasize table data, include an explanation, i.e., “Boldface denotes…”
- Unaltered computer output cannot be accepted.
Appendixes
- A descriptive title should be added to the Appendix heading.
- If you have more than one Appendix in your paper, label them as “Appendix A,” Appendix B,” etc.
- Equations in the Appendixes are numbered according to the Appendix. Equations in a single Appendix, or an appendix labeled “Appendix A,” are numbered as (A1), (A2), etc. Equations in following Appendixes are numbered according to the Appendix label, i.e., (B1), (B2), (C1), (C2), etc.
- The numbering of figures and tables in an Appendix continues the numbering in text.
References
- All references should be cited within the text.
- Adequate information should be provided on the reference list for the reviewer and readers to access the information.
- References can appear in one of these three formats:
By number – present the names of the authors, the journal, volume, page number(s) and year, as in: 19F. Hernandez, H. Wang, D. Dubrovski, and L. Blum, Appl. Phys. Lett. 121(9), 080401 (2022). (This paper will be listed as the 19th on the reference list. It can be cited in text as Ref. 19, superscript 19, or Hernandez et al.19)
In alphabetical order – according to the first author’s last name, the article title, journal name, volume, first and last page, and year, as in
Hernandez, F., Wang, H., Dubrovski, D., and Blum, L., “Advances toward a universal fault-tolerant quantum computer,” Appl. Phys. Lett. 121(9), 080401 (2022).
By number and alphabetical order – numbering references on an alphabetical-order reference list and citing them by their number in the text.
Preparing Your Author Declaration Section
Conflict of Interest Statement – A Conflict of Interest (COI) disclosure statement is required for every article.
- A COI is any personal interest or relationship that may be affected by publishing the submitted manuscript.
- A COI may exist from owning a patent or stock; being a member of a board of directors, advisory board, or committee for a company; receiving speaker or consultancy fees; etc.
- All potential conflicts directly related to the submitted work should be disclosed including any COI from 3 years before the start of the work. For more information about COIs, please see AIP Publishing’s COI policy and the COI form provided by the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors
- A COI statement is required even if the authors have no conflicts to report.
- The following chart shows types of COI and the related statement to place in your manuscript after the Acknowledgments section.
Type of COI | Sample COI statement to include in your manuscript |
---|---|
None | 1-The author (authors) has (have) no conflicts to disclose. |
Financial Interests | 1-(Author’s initials or name) reports grant(s) from {name of organization} and speaking fees for {insert name of organization} during the conduct of the study. 2-(Author’s initials or name) reports personal fees from (name of organization) outside the submitted work. 3-(Author’s initials or name) is a paid consultant for (name of organization) and owns stock in (name of company). |
Non-financial interests | 1-{Author’s initials or name} is an unpaid member of {name of organization}. 2-{Author’s initials or name} is on the advisory board of {name of organization}. |
Intellectual Property | {Author’s initials or name} has Patent {patent number} {pending/issued/licensed}. |
Ethics Approval Statement – Any research article that includes experiments using animals or humans needs to contain an ethics approval statement.
- The statement should include the name of the ethics committee, internal review board, an approval ID number, etc.
- For research using human participants, the ethics approval statement should indicate that informed consent was obtained from all participants or why this was not needed.
- Not meeting these requirements or following ethical standards in experiments using animals can result in the rejection of your manuscript
- Additional supporting documents can be uploaded when you submit your manuscript.
- For more guidance on accepted standards for human animal subjects in research, you can consult World Medical Association’s Declaration of Helsinki, International Guiding Principles for Biomedical Research Involving Animals, and Guidelines for Animal Research: Reporting of In Vivo Experiments (ARRIVE)
Author Contributions – A list of authors and their specific contributions, known as a CRediT (Contribution Role Taxonomy) Statement, is required for all submissions in accordance with the NISO standard.
- Please see the CRediT portion of our Ethics and Policy page for more information and to develop this statement for your paper.
- The Corresponding Author is responsible for providing accurate contribution descriptions for each author listed on the manuscript. They need to ensure that all authors have reviewed, discussed, and agreed to the complete statement.
- CrediT statements will be published as part of the article, in the Author Contributions section in the full text view and pdf/version of record.
Preparing Your Data Availability Statement
In accordance with our Data Sharing Policy, all datasets supporting the conclusion of your paper need to be available to readers.
- The data should include the minimal dataset needed to interpret, replicate, and build upon your findings.
- You can either deposit your datasets in a publicly available repository (where available or appropriate) or you can present them in the manuscript.
- To inform readers of where your data can be found, all manuscripts need to contain a data availability statement.
- Based on the availability of your dataset, select the appropriate data availability statement text from the chart below and include it in your manuscript after the Acknowledgments section.
How to Cite Datasets in References: We recommend the following dataset citation format:
- Creator(s): The author names that you have listed
- Publication year: The year when the data was made publicly available
- Title: This should match the upload.
- Publisher: The name of the entity that holds and archives the dataset
- Identifier: DOIs should be displayed as linkable, permanent URLs, including the https://doi.org prefix.
Example:
Dataset: J. Smith and M. Ross (2015). “Chemical and mineral compositions of sediments from ODP Site,” Name of repository. https://doi.org/12.3456/nameofrepository.78901
Information about Version and Resource Type can also be included in the reference but is not required: Creator(s) (Publication Year). “Title,” Version, Publisher, Resource Type. Identifier
Example:
J. Smith and M. Ross (2015). “Chemical and mineral compositions of sediments from ODP Site,” Name of repository, V. 2.1, Dataset. https://doi.org/12.3456/nameofrepository.78901
Using Supplementary Material in Your Manuscript
Data tables and/or text that are too long or may be of limited interest to readers can be included as “supplementary material,” which can aid the reviewer and be accessed by readers online after publication.
If you are uploading supplementary material, please note the following:
- Please create a “Supplementary Material” section in your paper after the Conclusions. Within this section, you can provide a brief description of this information.
- Note that any mention of this information within the body of your paper should use the phrase “supplementary material,” so readers can access it.
- At initial submission, please upload your supplementary material in a pdf (SI.pdf), as it needs to be approved by the Journal Editor as part of the manuscript’s peer review process.
- We have partnered with Figshare—a general-purpose repository—to host all supplementary material.
- After your manuscript has been accepted for publication, AIP Publishing will deposit your supplementary material in Figshare on your behalf, where it will be assigned a digital object identifier (DOI) for citation and referencing.
- This increases the discoverability of your materials due to the searchable, user-friendly Figshare platform, which contains analytics and usage data to note the impact and influence of your work.
- This simple process helps you share your supplementary material more broadly without additional effort.
- Additional information can be found here.
Using Multimedia in Your Manuscript
Audio, Video, and 3D rendering are multimedia files you can include in your manuscript. Submit all multimedia files with your initial submission.
Audio:
- Acceptable file formats include PCM (.pcm), WAV (.wav), AIFF (.aif), and MP3 (.mp3) at 128 KB or greater.
Video/Animation:
- Acceptable file formats for are mp4, .m4v, .mov, .avi, .wmv, with MP4 files preferred. Animated gifs (.gif) cannot be accepted. For best playability, use the following settings:
- Video codec: H.264
- Chroma subsampling: YUV 4:2:0
- If the video includes audio, use audio codec AAC
- JPEG, HTML, and PDF cannot be accepted as multimedia. These formats should be submitted as supplementary materials instead.
- A representative “still” image, taken from the video, should be placed in the manuscript as a figure, ensuring that the fine lines and details are clear. Acceptable file formats for these still images are JPEG, EPS, and TIFF.
- Treat all multimedia files as figures, numbering them in the order they are referred to in text. Number the static figure and multimedia file the same.
- Add (Multimedia available online) in the figure caption and after the figure citation in text.
- Cite all multimedia within the text, referring to their figure number.
- Keep the file size less than 10 MB, so readers can view them.
- You can provide video as either Supplementary Material or Multimedia files.
Multimedia metadata: If using multimedia files in your manuscript, provide the following:
- Caption/description: A caption describing the content of the media object (similar to a figure caption) is required.
- Type: The type of content, such as video or audio, is desirable (optional).
- Format: The format indicates the media file type, such as MOV, MP4, or WAV (optional).
Preparing Your Graphics
- For Authors Using Word: Please insert all figure images into the main body near the figure callout or at the end of the paper.
- For Authors Using TeX: Please use the appropriate TeX commands, such as \includegraphics or \includepdf, to incorporate figure images into your manuscript PDF. Ensure that these figure images are sized and formatted precisely as you want them to appear in the final online article. (Please note that your author-generated PDF with figures will be used to override the system-generated PDF.)
Guidelines
- All fonts should be embedded in your figures.
- Number your figures in the order in which they appear in text.
- Identify all figure parts with (a), (b), etc. Avoid any large size differences of the lettering and labels used within one illustration.
- Submit illustrations in the size and resolution you wish them to appear in print.
- For JMP (one-column journal) The maximum published width of figures is 6.69 inches (17 cm). The maximum depth of figures should be 8 ¼ in. (21.1 cm). Legends or labels within figures should be a minimum of 8-point type size (2.8 mm high; 1/8 in. high). A minimum of 0.5-point width for lines.
- For all other journals: The maximum published width for a one-column figure is 3.37 inches (8.5 cm). The maximum width for a two-column figure is 6.69 inches (17 cm). The maximum depth of figures should be 8 ¼ in. (21.1 cm). Legends or labels within figures should be a minimum of 8-point type size (2.8 mm high; 1/8 in. high). A minimum of 0.5-point width for lines.
- Each graphic should be prepared for 100% reproduction to avoid problems from large reductions in size.
- Ensure that lettering and lines are dark enough and thick enough to reproduce clearly, especially if reduction is necessary. Remember that fine lines tend to disappear upon reduction.
- For figure creation or figure redrawing services, see how we can help at https://authorservices.aip.org/services_pricing
Electronic graphic formats
- Use only these file formats: SVG, EPS, PS, TIFF (.tif), PDF, JPEG (.jpg), and PNG (.png). Application files (e.g., Corel Draw, Microsoft Word) are not acceptable. AIP Publishing suggests the use of Adobe Illustrator (Paid, OS X, Windows) or Inkscape (Freeware, OS X, Windows, Linux) for creating acceptable illustrations and Adobe Photoshop (Paid, OS X, Windows) or GIMP (Freeware, OS X, Windows Linux) for editing acceptable images.
- Label each figure part (a), (b), etc., if applicable.
- When submitting your manuscript, include all illustrations and line art for your paper.
- Set the correct orientation for each graphics file.
- Set the graphic for:
- Line art: 600 dpi resolution and black/white bitmap, not grayscale.
- Halftones: 264 dpi and grayscale, not black/white bitmap.
- Combinations (line art and halftone): 600 dpi for and grayscale, not black/white bitmap.
- Color online: 300 dpi TIFF, PS, or EPS format. If selecting a file mode, use RGB (red, green, blue).
Production-ready PDF graphics
For accepted manuscripts, a PDF source file for graphics is not preferred. However, properly prepared PDF illustration files may be used in the production process of your accepted manuscript if you follow these guidelines:
- PDF should only be used as the source file for graphics when the preferred formats (PS, EPS, or TIFF) cannot be generated.
- In the PDF graphic, the resolution of any shaded or photographic images needs to be 600 pixels per inch (PPI).
- Within the PDF illustration, resolution of line art with no shading should be 1200 pixels per inch (PPI).
- All fonts need to be embedded in the PDF.
- When creating a PDF through your application’s print command, select “High Quality Print.”
Required Highlight Image
To establish a strong and consistent visual identity for your article, a highlight image is required with your revised submission. It can be either a figure from your paper or another image you create that reflects your work. Your highlight image effectively represents your article online.
- This image should measure 8.0139 in. wide X 6.2739 in. high and be a minimum of 300 dpi.
- Acceptable file types for the highlight image are EPS, TIFF, and JPEG.
- Your highlight image will display above your article title in the Table of Contents online.
- If your paper is selected as the cover article, your highlight image may serve as the cover image for the journal issue.
- If you need support in creating your highlight image, you can contact AIP Author Services for figure formatting or figure creation services.
Color Printing Charges
As a service to our authors, effective 2 January 2018, illustrations will appear in color in the online journal free of charge and will be reproduced in black and white in the printed journals.To take advantage of this free service, you need to:
- supply color graphics files (.eps, .ps, .tif, or .pdf only),
- submit graphics files in time for utilization during the production process,
- submit only one version of each graphics file,
- ensure that colors chosen will reproduce well when printed in black & white, and
- ensure that descriptions of figures in text will be sufficiently clear for both print and online versions.
Guidelines for Using Chinese, Japanese, and Korean Names
Authors may insert the respective characters, so their names will also be displayed in Chinese, Japanese, or Korean, by following the instructions below.
- Check the PDF of the manuscript, as produced by the Peer X-Press system on first submission, to ensure that the manuscript files have been processed correctly.
- In addition, carefully check any production proofs received prior to the publication of the paper.
Using CJK characters in a Microsoft Word Submission
If you are submitting in Microsoft Word, simply add the characters in parentheses after the name of each author who would like their name shown in their own language. To avoid potential problems, please use the standard Microsoft fonts for the characters.
Using CJK characters in a LaTeX Submission
- If you use TeX to prepare your manuscript, you will need to use the CJK language package for CJK characters:
https://www.overleaf.com/learn/latex/Chinese
https://www.overleaf.com/learn/latex/Japanese
https://www.overleaf.com/learn/latex/Korean - Installing the CJK package can be quite difficult, so it is best to use a TeX distribution (such as TeXLive) that has it pre-installed.
- Once the CJK package is properly installed, you will need to use the package to select an encoding and a font to use. The CJK markup should be as follows:
- Put \usepackage {CJK} after the \document class line
- \begin {CJK*} {} {} after the \begin{document} line
- \end{CJK*} after the \maketitle line.
- For example:
\document class line {revtex4}
\usepackage {CJK}
….
\begin{document}
\begin {CJK*} {GB} { } % Use default fonts from CJK (see below)
\title {Title of Paper}
\author {Your name (characters)}
\affiliation {Your affiliation}
….
\maketitle
\end{CJK*}
- The following encodings from the CJK package are supported:
- Chinese: GB, Big5, GBK, and UTF 8
- Japanese: JIS, SJIS (Shift-JIS), and UTF 8
- Korean: KS and UTF 8
- As the Big5 and Shift-JIS encodings use some reserved TeX characters, care needs to be taken to process files using these encodings (see the CJK package documentation).
- Files may be prepared using any fonts found in the CJK installation as well as the Cyberbit font for UTF 8 encodings. Please select one of the standard fonts from the distribution.
- As CJK installations can vary by how the fonts are actually named and installed, it is safest to leave the font family argument empty and let the TeX installation use its default font for that encoding: \begin {CJK*} {} { }
- Please be sure to check the PDF produced by the submission software to ensure that the Chinese, Japanese, or Korean characters were processed correctly.
- Note that if you are using UTF 8, you may need to use the \CJKfamily macro when processing the file on your local machine.
- If using TeXLive and UTF 8 as the input coding, one of the following \CJKfamily macros should be inserted right before the CJK name:
- for simplified Chinese: \CJK family {gbsn}
- for traditional Chinese: \CJKfamily {bsmi}
- for Japanese: \CJKfamily {min}
- for Korean: \CJKfamily {mj}
- It is possible to call\CJKfamily more than once, if needed (for example, to properly insert a Japanese name and then a Korean name). Before the final submission, all \CJKfamily macro calls should be commented out.
- If you require further assistance, please contact Overleaf Support
Additional Journal Specific Instructions
AIP Advances: MMM Articles
Manuscript Length for “Contributed” MMM Articles (3500 words)
Contributed MMM Manuscripts should not exceed 3500 words. Please note that the abstract, title, author list, acknowledgments, and references are all excluded from the 3500-word limit. Figures, tables, and equations, however, are included and need to be accounted for by calculating a word-count equivalent to the space they occupy.
Please use these guidelines for estimating length.
LaTeX users
Authors are advised to use the LaTeX file. If the version of the manuscript obtained using the “reprint” option fits on 4 pages, the length is acceptable.
Word users
Highlight the manuscript text, excluding abstract, author list, acknowledgments, and references, and note the word count at the bottom of the screen. Add to that the word-count-equivalents for figures, tables, and equations as follows:
- Figures: 400 words for an average figure.
- Tables: 13 words per line, plus 26 words.
- Equations: 13 words per line.
- If the total number of words (text + figures + tables + equations) is 3500 or less, the length is acceptable.
Manuscript Length for “Invited” MMM Articles (6000 words)
Invited MMM Manuscripts should not exceed 6000 words. Please note that the abstract, title, author list, acknowledgments, and references are all excluded from the 6000-word limit. Figures, tables, and equations, however, are included and need to be accounted for by calculating a word-count equivalent to the space they occupy.
Please use these guidelines for estimating length.
LaTeX users
Authors are advised to use the LaTeX file. If the version of the manuscript obtained using the “reprint” option fits on seven pages, the length is acceptable.
Word users
Highlight the manuscript text, excluding abstract, author list, acknowledgments, and references, and note the word count at the bottom of the screen. Add to that the word-count-equivalents for figures, tables, and equations as follows:
- Figures: 400 words for an average figure.
- Tables: 13 words per line, plus 26 words.
- Equations: 13 words per line.
- If the total number of words (text + figures + tables + equations) is 6000 or less, the length is acceptable.
Applied Physics Letters (APL)
Applied Physics Letters (APL) is an international, peer-reviewed letters journal publishing concise papers in all areas of applied physics that communicate original research discoveries justifying rapid publication.
Cover Letter
Authors submitting to APL are encouraged to provide a cover letter as part of their submission.
- It can help convey the importance of the research to the Editors, explain why you consider the paper appropriate for the broad readership of Applied Physics Letters, and specifically how it aligns with the criteria for publication.
- The cover letter should make a clear statement on the manuscript’s significance and list related work by the authors.
- This letter will not be shared with reviewers. It is intended to aid in the editorial pre-screening of manuscripts.
Manuscript Information:
Article Length
- At the time of initial submission, your paper needs to be 3000 words or less, including figure and table captions. This word count excludes the title, author list, abstract, acknowledgments, data availability statement, references, and non-text items including figures, tables, and equations.
- Normally, papers longer than 3000 words will be rejected, and the authors will be required to shorten the paper and submit it again as a new manuscript.
- Longer papers may be considered only in exceptional cases if the quality warrants special consideration. Authors will need to explain the need for the additional length in their cover letter.
Use of Figures
- Authors are encouraged to include up to five figures in the paper to illustrate their results.
- Images may be grouped together as separate panels in one figure if they are logically connected and clear to the reviewer and readers.
Use of Section Headings
- Section heading are not permitted in Letters.
APL Bioengineering (APB)
Manuscript Information:
There is no length limit in this journal; however, manuscripts should be concise and present a clear description of the research for reproducibility. As a guideline, the main text of an article should contain approximately 3500 words, excluding the title and references.
Required Methods Section
All APB articles need to contain a concise Methods section, which includes the elements needed for interpreting and replicating results.
- This is the only mandatory section with a heading in APB. Other sections or section headings are permitted but not required.
- You may place the Methods section after the Conclusions.
Required Ethics Approval Statement
All APB articles need to include an ethics approval statement, even if the manuscript does not present research using human participants or animals.
- If ethics approval does not apply to your work, please include the statement “Ethics approval not required.”
- If the work presented used human participants or animals, the ethics approval statement needs to include the name of the ethics committee or institutional review board and the approval ID number.
- For research using human participants, the ethics approval statement needs to also indicate that informed consent was obtained from all participants or why it was not needed.
- Not meeting these requirements, or following ethical standards in experiments using animals, can result in the rejection of your manuscript
- Additional supporting documents can be uploaded when you submit your manuscript.
- For more information, see https://pubs.aip.org/aip/apb/pages/policies.
- Authors who would like more guidance on the accepted standards for human and animal subjects in research may consult the following documents:
World Medical Association’s Declaration of Helsinki
International Guiding Principles for Biomedical Research Involving Animals
Guidelines for Animal Research: Reporting of In Vivo Experiments (ARRIVE)
APL Electronic Devices (AED)
Manuscript Length:
There is no length limit in this journal; however, manuscripts should be concise and present a clear description of the research for reproducibility. Guidelines are presented below.
Original Research Articles contain novel and significant findings relevant to many researchers in the field. The main text of an Article should contain approximately 3500 words, excluding the title and references.
Reviews are succinct overviews that provide historical background and detail recent progress in topics covered by the journal’s scope. Reviews are recommended to be up to 8000 words. In these papers, please insert section headings to structure the content and guide the reader.
Perspectives cover emerging topics or highlight a recent scientific discovery and/or industry direction. The main text should contain less than 5500 words.
A Roadmap is a type of review article. These are by invitation only. This article type combines multiple sections, each written by different authors. Roadmaps are recommended to be up to 8000 words. In these papers, please insert section headings to structure the content and guide the reader.
Data Availability
APL Electronic Devices requires that authors make any new data publicly available on a repository of the author’s choosing at the time of submission. Any reasons that the material cannot be made available to the readers should be disclosed to the editors.
APL Energy (APE)
Cover Letter and Statement of Significance
Authors of APL Energy are required to provide a cover letter as part of their submission. This can help convey the importance of the research to the Editors, explain why you consider the paper appropriate for the readership of APL Energy and specifically how it aligns with the criteria for publication. The cover letter should make a clear statement on the manuscript’s significance and list related work by the authors. In addition, authors will be required to indicate the significance of their work in the Statement of Significance section during the submission process.
Data Availability
APL Energy requires that authors make any new data, code, and additional supplementary material publicly available on a repository of the author’s choosing at the time of manuscript submission. Any reasons that the material cannot be made available to the readers should be disclosed and explained in detail to the editors.
Manuscript Length
There is no length limit in this journal; however, manuscripts should be concise and present a clear description of the research for reproducibility.
As a guideline, the main text of an article should contain approximately 3500 words, excluding the title and references. For guidance on Perspectives, the main text should contain less than 5500 words. Reviews and Roadmaps are recommended to be up to 8000 words. In these papers, please insert section headings to structure the content and guide the reader.
Proof of Concepts and Prototypes
Proof of Concept and Prototype articles describe an already demonstrated or intellectual property (IP) protected idea and its pathway to commercial viability. Authors will report the innovation derived from the idea, the problem to be solved, the resulting application, and the Technology Readiness Level. Discussion on further testing requirements, next-level demonstrations, scale-up, marketability, and financial potential is recommended.
These articles are typically by invitation only and the recommended length is 2000 words. If you are interested in submitting a Proof of Concept and Prototype article to APL Energy, please complete the pre-submission proposal form and send it to aplenergy-journalmanager@aip.org.
Author Guidelines for Proof of Concepts and Prototypes.
APL Machine Learning (AML)
Manuscript Length
- There is no length limit in this journal; however, manuscripts should be concise and present a clear description of the research for reproducibility.
- As a guideline, the main text of an article should contain approximately 3500 words, excluding the title and references.
- For guidance on Reviews, Perspectives, and Roadmaps, the main text should contain less than 5500 words. In these papers, please insert section headings to structure the content and guide the reader.
Data Availability
- APL Machine Learning requires that authors make any data, code, and additional supplementary material publicly available on a repository of the author’s choosing at the time of manuscript submission.
- Any reasons that the material cannot be made available to the readers should be disclosed and explained in detail to the editors.
APL Materials (APM)
Manuscript Length
There are no article length restrictions in this journal. Guidelines are presented below.
Regular articles: Your manuscript should be concise and present a clear description of the research for reproducibility. As a guideline, the main text of a regular article should contain approximately 3500 words, excluding the title and references.
Perspectives, Research Updates, and Commentaries: The main text of these article types should contain less than 5500 words. In these papers, please insert section headings to structure the content and guide the reader.
Comments and Responses: A Comments section is available for criticism of or additions to Letters that have already been published. A Response to a critical Comment will be requested from the authors of the published article. Comments and Responses should not exceed 1000 words.
APL Quantum (APQ)
Manuscript Length
There is no length limit in this journal; however, manuscripts should be concise and present a clear description of the research for reproducibility.
As a guideline, the main text of an article should contain approximately 3500 words, excluding the title and references. For guidance on Perspectives, the main text should contain less than 5500 words. Reviews, Tutorials, and Roadmaps are recommended to be up to 8000 words. In these papers, please insert section headings to structure the content and guide the reader.
Data Availability
APL Quantum requires that authors make any new data, code, and additional supplementary material publicly available on a repository of the author’s choosing at the time of manuscript submission. Any reasons that the material cannot be made available to the readers should be disclosed and explained in detail to the editors.
AVS Quantum Science (AQS)
AVS Quantum Science (AQS) launched in 2019 with a focus on Review articles. We are now considering proposals for Reviews, Perspectives, and Original Research Articles.
Guidelines for Submission
If you are interested in submitting one of the article types, please follow these guidelines:
- Before submitting, complete the relevant Editorial Summary Intake Form and email it to the Editorial team for pre-screening by the editors:
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- Once you receive a response, you will be able to prepare your manuscript using the information For Authors, at https://avs.scitation.org/aqs/authors/manuscript.
- You can then submit your paper using the AQS online submission system at https://aqs.peerx-press.org/.
As a journal in its early years, our editors will rely on the Editorial Summary Intake Form to establish working relationships with authors as well as ensure papers are within desired scope, quality, and diversity we aim to achieve.
Manuscript Length
There are no strict page limits set but we provide the following advice:
- Reviews can be Focused Reviews that are short, timely reviews that cover recent advances in established fields or an emerging area of quantum science and are approximately 10–20 pages in length or can be Standard Reviews that are comprehensive, providing more in-depth coverage in established areas of quantum science, that are approximately 20–50 pages in length.
- Perspectives provide a balanced and objective overview of recent advances and the author’s unique view on where the field is headed and are typically around 10 pages in length.
Additional AQS information
Author responsibilities: https://publishing.aip.org/resources/researchers/policies-and-ethics/
Permissions: https://publishing.aip.org/resources/researchers/rights-and-permissions/
Sharing Content Online: https://publishing.aip.org/resources/researchers/rights-and-permissions/sharing-content-online/
For additional questions: Editorial team.
Applied Physics Reviews (APR)
Applied Physics Reviews publishes the following types of articles:
- Original Research Articles report on important and novel research study of high quality and general interest to the chemical physics community.
- Review Articles can be either an authoritative and comprehensive review of an established area, or a short, timely review covering an emerging area or recent advance in an established field of chemical physics.
Cover Letter Requirements for Original Research Manuscripts
Research manuscript to APRAuthors submitting an Original Research manuscript to APR need to provide a cover letter with their submission. This will help the Editor can make an adequate assessment of your manuscript. The cover letter should make a clear statement about the manuscript, including the following:
- The knowledge gap filled by this study
- The novelty of the work
- The importance of the of results
- Its appeal to CPR’s broad readership
- A list related work by the authors
Proposal Requirement for Review Manuscripts Without Invitation
The majority of review articles in APR are by invitation. Authors who have been invited to submit a Review article do not need to submit a proposal.
Authors who wish to submit a review article without invitation need to submit a proposal by
- Downloading the APR editorial summary template.
- Presenting a strong case for why their review is timely and of interest to the readership of CPR.
- Providing substantial evidence that they are recognized as top experts in the field and that they are highly qualified to write the review.
- Including an editorial summary with their article for consideration by the editors.
- Uploading the template to APR online manuscript submission system.
APL Photonics (APP)
Cover Letter
Authors of APP are encouraged to provide a cover letter as part of their submission.
- It can help convey the importance of the research to the Editors, explain why you consider the paper appropriate for the broad readership of APL Photonics, and specifically how it aligns with the criteria for publication.
- The cover letter should be about one page long, make a clear statement on the manuscript’s significance and long-lasting impact, and list related work by the authors.
- This letter will not be shared with reviewers. It is intended to aid in the editorial pre-screening of manuscripts.
Article Types with Length Limits:
- Letters should contain no more than 3500 words
- Comments and Responses should contain no more than 1000 words
Please note that the abstract, title, author list, references, figures, tables, equations, and acknowledgments are all excluded from the respective word limit. Other article types do not have a length limit, but the APL Photonics editors may ask that you shorten your manuscript if they decide it should be more concise.
LaTeX users
Authors are advised to use the LaTeX template.
Use of Headings
In manuscripts other than Letters and Comments, please insert section headings to structure the content and guide the reader.
Biomicrofluidics (BMF)
Fast Track Articles
BMF Fast Track articles replace Brief Communications to report on the most novel, high impact, cutting edge, and technically significant developments in the field. Because of the urgency and scientific importance of the work, Fast Track articles have an accelerated review process and will receive priority consideration for the journal’s Editor’s Picks and AIP Publishing press releases.
To be meet the criteria for a Fast Track article, the manuscript needs to
- be highly original, reporting the most novel, significant, relevant, and timely advances in the field,
- be of the highest scientific quality,
- be written in a clear and concise manner with no further need for technical/grammatical editing, and
- adhere to the length guidelines.
Papers submitted to Fast Track will be initially screened for novelty and quality by the Editors and then reviewed by Editorial Advisory Board members, with a review response in under 14 days. Fast Track authors are requested to respond to reviews within 10 days.
Fast Track Article Length
Fast Track Articles should not exceed 2000 words (approximately three printed journal pages). Please note that the abstract, title, author list, references, and acknowledgments are all excluded from the 2000-word limit. Figures, tables, and equations are included and need to be accounted for by calculating a word-count equivalent to the space they occupy. Note that the abstract should not exceed 100 words. Please use these guidelines for estimating Fast Track Article length.
Fast Track Word users
Highlight the manuscript text, excluding abstract, author list, acknowledgments, and references, and note the word count at the bottom of the screen. Add to that the word-count-equivalents for figures, tables and equations as follows:
- Figures: 400 words for an average figure
- Tables: 13 words per line, plus 26 words.
- Equations: 13 words per line.
If the total number of words (text + figures + tables + equations) is 2000 or less, the length is acceptable.
Fast Track LaTeX users
Authors are advised to use the LaTeX template. If the version of the manuscript obtained using the “reprint” option fits on three pages, the length is acceptable.
Fast Track Supplementary Material
Fast track articles may contain supplementary material (e.g., supporting information, multimedia, etc.); it cannot contain or discuss/interpret essential results and cannot be considered an extension of the manuscript. Failure to adhere to these guidelines may result in either a delay in processing of the manuscript or rejection at initial screening. A Fast Track manuscript that is rejected at initial screening may be resubmitted as a “regular” original-research paper.
Biophysics Reviews (BPR)
Biophysics Reviews publishes the following types of articles:
- Original Research Articles report on important and novel research study of high quality and general interest to the chemical physics community.
- Review Articles can be either an authoritative and comprehensive review of an established area, or a short, timely review covering an emerging area or recent advance in an established field of chemical physics.
Invitations for Review Articles
- The need to develop a topic is proposed by the journal’s Editorial Board.
- Before extending an invitation, Editors—with a related research field—fully evaluate the potential author’s academic reputation, publication records, and other academic activities.
- Generally, decisions about research topics and appropriate authors are made by editorial discussions that often involve consultations with the journal’s Editorial Advisory Board.
Cover Letter Requirements for Original Research Manuscripts
Authors submitting an Original Research manuscript to BPR need to provide a cover letter with their submission. This will help the Editor can make an adequate assessment of your manuscript. The cover letter should make a clear statement about the manuscript, including the following:
- The knowledge gap filled by this study
- The novelty of the work
- The importance of the of results
- Its appeal to BPR’s broad readership
- A list related work by the authors
Required Methods Section in Original Research Articles
All BPR Original Research articles need to contain a concise Methods section, which includes the elements needed for interpreting and replicating results. You may place the Methods section after the Conclusion.
Required Ethics Approval Statement on Original Research Articles
All BPR Original Research articles need to include an ethics approval statement, even if the manuscript does not present research using human participants or animals.
- If ethics approval does not apply to your work, please include the statement “Ethics approval not required.”
- If the work presented used human participants or animals, the ethics approval statement needs to include the name of the ethics committee or institutional review board and the approval ID number.
- For research using human participants, the ethics approval statement needs to also indicate that informed consent was obtained from all participants or why it was not needed.
- Not meeting these requirements, or following ethical standards in experiments using animals, can result in the rejection of your manuscript.
- Additional supporting documents can be uploaded when you submit your manuscript.
- For more information, see https://pubs.aip.org/aip/bpr/pages/policies.
- Authors who would like more guidance on the accepted standards for human and animal subjects in research may consult the following documents:
World Medical Association’s Declaration of Helsinki
International Guiding Principles for Biomedical Research Involving Animals
Guidelines for Animal Research: Reporting of In Vivo Experiments (ARRIVE)
Proposal Requirement for Review Manuscripts Without Invitation
The majority of review articles in BPR are by invitation. Authors who have been invited to submit a Review article do not need to submit a proposal.
Authors who wish to submit a review article without invitation need to submit a proposal by
- Downloading the BPR editorial summary template.
- Presenting a strong case for why their review is timely and of interest to the readership of BPR.
- Providing substantial evidence that they are recognized as top experts in the field and that they are highly qualified to write the review.
- Including an editorial summary with their article for consideration by the editors.
- Uploading the template to BPR online manuscript submission system
Chaos (CHA)
Lead Paragraph
The first paragraph of the article should be the Lead Paragraph and contain the main points of the article, providing the “big picture” in a way that can be understood by non-specialist readers.
Chaos Fast Track Article Length
Chaos Fast Track Articles should not exceed 5750 words [approximately six (6) printed journal pages]. The abstract, title, author list, references, and acknowledgments are all excluded from the 5750-word limit. Figures, tables, and equations are included and need to be accounted for by calculating a word-count equivalent to the space they occupy. Note that the abstract should not exceed 250 words.
Please use these guidelines for estimating length.
LaTeX users
Authors are advised to use the LaTeX template. The double-column version of the manuscript obtained using the “reprint” option will indicate whether the length is acceptable.
Word users
Highlight the manuscript text, excluding the abstract, author list, acknowledgments, and references, making note of the word count at the bottom of the screen. Add to that the word-count-equivalents for figures, tables, and equations as follows:
- Figures: An average single-column figure will displace 200 words; an average double column figure will displace 400 words.
- Tables: 6.5 words per line, plus 13 words for single-column tables. 13 words per line, plus 26 words for double-column tables.
- Equations: 7 words per line for single-column equations. 13 words per line for double-column equations.
If the total number of words (text + figures + tables + equations) is 5750 or less, the length is acceptable.
Chemical Physics Reviews (CPR)
Chemical Physics Reviews publishes the following types of articles:
- Original Research Articles report on important and novel research study of high quality and general interest to the chemical physics community.
- Review Articles can be either an authoritative and comprehensive review of an established area, or a short, timely review covering an emerging area or recent advance in an established field of chemical physics.
Cover Letter Requirements for Original Research Manuscripts
Authors submitting an Original Research manuscript to CPR need to provide a cover letter with their submission. This will help the Editor can make an adequate assessment of your manuscript. The cover letter should make a clear statement about the manuscript, including the following:
- The knowledge gap filled by this study
- The novelty of the work
- The importance of the of results
- Its appeal to CPR’s broad readership
- A list related work by the authors
Proposal Requirement for Review Manuscripts Without Invitation
The majority of review articles in CPR are by invitation. Authors who have been invited to submit a Review article do not need to submit a proposal.
Authors who wish to submit a review article without invitation need to submit a proposal by
- Downloading the CPR editorial summary template.
- Presenting a strong case for why their review is timely and of interest to the readership of CPR.
- Providing substantial evidence that they are recognized as top experts in the field and that they are highly qualified to write the review.
- Including an editorial summary with their article for consideration by the editors.
- Uploading the template to CPR online manuscript submission system.
International Journal of Fluid Engineering (IJFE)
Manuscript Length
International Journal of Fluid Engineering mainly publishes two types of articles: Original Research Articles and Reviews. We recommend the following page limits:
- Original Research Articles report on original and novel research relating to fluid mechanics and should not exceed 15,000 words (approximately sixteen printed journal pages). Please note that the abstract, title, author list, references, and acknowledgments are all excluded from the word limit. Figures, tables, and equations, however, are included and need to be accounted for by calculating a word-count equivalent to the space they occupy.
- Reviews can be Brief Reviews that are short, timely reviews that cover recent advances in
established fields or an emerging field of fluid engineering and should not exceed 21,000 words (approximately twenty-five printed journal pages) or can be Standard Reviews that are comprehensive, providing more in-depth coverage in established areas of fluid mechanics, should not exceed 35,000 words (approximately forty printed journal pages).
LaTeX users
Authors are advised to use the LaTeX template. If the version of the manuscript obtained using the “reprint” option fits on approximately twelve pages (excluding abstract, title, author list, references, and acknowledgments), the length is acceptable.
Word users
Highlight the manuscript text, excluding abstract, author list, acknowledgments, and references, and note the word count at the bottom of the screen. Add to that the word-count equivalents for figures, tables and equations as follows:
- Figures: An average single-column figure will displace 200 words. An average double-column figure will displace 400 words.
- Tables: 6.5 words per line, plus 13 words for single-column tables. 13 words per line, plus 26 words for double-column tables.
- Equations: 7 words per line for single-column equations. 13 words per line for double-column equations.
References
Numerical references are required. Include the citation to the dataset(s) in the References list of your manuscript, providing the following required elements: Creator(s), Title, Publisher, Publication Year, and Identifier and may contain these optional elements: Version and Resource Type.
- In the References list: Numbering references according to the cited order.
- In the text: Citing references by their number in the upper right corner of the corresponding positions.
Formatting
- Variables should be in italic. Their subscripts or superscripts, if they are also variables, should be italicized. However, if the subscripts or superscripts are not variables, they should not be italicized.
- Vectors and matrices should be both bold and italic.
- Variables in figures, tables, and equations should be formatted in italic, the same as in the text.
- Displayed equations should be punctuated (period or comma), aligned to bring out their structure, and numbered on the right-hand side.
- Indentation after equations is dependent on whether an author has started a new paragraph after an equation (indent), or if the text following the equation is part of the same paragraph (no indent).
- Identify all figure parts with (a), (b), etc. Avoid any large size differences of the lettering and labels used within one illustration.
The Journal of Chemical Physics (JCP)
JCP Communications
These are preliminary reports of highly significant work whose rapid publication will be important to a relatively large number of workers in the field.
- Communications may be complete in themselves or may be followed by Articles, which present substantial additional significant information.
- Communications have a length limit of 3500 words. Note that figures, equations, tables, and references should not be included in the 3500-word count.
- Because of the length limitation, the standard of proof required to support the scientific argument is relaxed somewhat. Scientific arguments that are plausible and, if correct, important, may be presented in Communications even if the detailed proof needs to be presented in a later publication.
- Arguments that are implausible but can be demonstrated by lengthy and detailed proof to be correct should not be presented in Communications.
- Communications are given priority attention in both the peer review and production processes.
Reports of new potential energy surfaces in JCP
All papers on new potential energy surfaces need to be accompanied by a tape archive (e.g., PES.tar) file.
- The PES.tar (tape archive file) should contain a computer program that can be used to generate the potential and preferably also its forces for use in classical trajectory calculations.
- The only exception will be potentials that are simple enough to be reconstructed based only from the information given in the paper.
- The computer program can be written in any modern computer language, but the compiler that the authors used (including its version number) needs to be specified, and the program needs to be accompanied by example input and output files that reproduce some of the key results presented in the paper.
- The PES.tar file will be made available to the referees to give them the option to examine it.
- If the manuscript is accepted for publication, the PES.tar file will be published as supplementary material.
Journal of Mathematical Physics (JMP)
TeX Submission Template
Authors are encouraged to use the JMP-specific TeX template in Overleaf to prepare their submission.
Journal of Physical and Chemical Reference Data (JPCRD)
Uncertainties
The objective of JPCRD is to provide critically evaluated physical and chemical property data, fully documented as to the original sources and the criteria used for evaluation. Such data are of little use without a quantitative characterization of uncertainties that includes effects of both random (precision) and systemic (bias) uncertainties, as well as a discussion of sources of errors and the rationale for assigning uncertainty estimates. For a more detailed discussion of uncertainty analysis, we refer authors to the following resources:
- U.S. Guide to the Expression of Uncertainty in Measurement, ANSI/NCSL Z540-2-1997, American National Standard for Expressing Uncertainty (National Conference of Standards Laboratories, Boulder, CO, 1997).
- B. N. Taylor and C. E. Kuyatt, Guidelines for Evaluating and Expressing the Uncertainty of NIST Measurement Results, NIST Technical Note 1297 (NIST, Gaithersburg, MD, 1994).
References
The use of et al. is permitted in the reference list. Do not insert “and” before the final author’s name or a comma before “et al.” [21A. Cavalleri, S. Wall, C. Simpson et al., Nature (London) 442, 664 (2006).]
- Please note that including article titles in the reference list is optional but encouraged.
- Four styles of references are acceptable in a JPR article: numerical (preferred style), bibliographic, numerical/bibliographic, and Squib:
- Numerical references (Preferred)
In the text:
“The residual intensity decreases and the side lobes12 are stretched for a linearly polarized LG beam.”
On the reference list: (This example would be the 12th reference on the list.)
12W. E. Acree, Jr. and J. S. Chickos, “Phase change enthalpies and entropies of liquid crystals,” J. Phys. Chem. Ref. Data 35, 1051 (2006). - Bibliographic References
In the text:
“Such a 2D pattern can be generated by the superposition of the orthogonally oriented standing waves (Oberti et al., 2007; Manneberg et al., 2008).”
“For the early history of such studies, we refer the reader to Yosioka and Kawasima, 1955; Gor’kov, 1962; Nyborg, 1968; Crum, 1975.”
“Liu et al. (2002, 2003) developed an approach to micromixing based on acoustic microstreaming…”
On the reference list:
Mulero, A., Cachadiña, I., and Bautista, D., “Recommended correlations for the surface tension of n-alkanes,” J. Phys. Chem. Ref. Data 50, 023104 (2021). - Numerical/Bibliographic References (They are numbered according to their alphabetical order in the reference list and cited by their number in text. They do not have to be cited in numerical sequence in text.)
In the text:
“…which reflects the fundamental concepts as described by Mulero et al.19”
On the reference list:
19Mulero, A., Cachadiña, I., and Bautista, D., “Recommended correlations for the surface tension of n-alkanes,” J. Phys. Chem. Ref. Data 50, 023104 (2021). - Squib References
In the text: (enclosed in square brackets)
“The characteristic wavelengths of neutral cesium were first observed in 1861 by Kirchhoff and Bunsen [61KIR/BUN].”
“Using Doppler-free two-photon spectroscopy, several experiments [79LOR/NIE, 80LOR/WEB, 82GOY/RAI] were done to extend the range and accuracy of measured transitions and fine structure splittings.”
On the reference list (Use of either the 2-digit or 4-digit year is acceptable as long as it is consistent throughout the paper.):
02DOE Doe, J., J. Phys. Chem. Ref. Data 36, 625 (2002).
2002DOE Doe, J., J. Phys. Chem. Ref. Data 36, 625 (2002).
- Numerical references (Preferred)
Units, symbol, terminology, and chemical nomenclature
It is the policy of JPCRD to follow the recommendations of recognized internationals bodies such as ISO, IUPAC, and IUPAP unless there are strong grounds for making an exception. Sources of recommendations on symbols, terminology, and units are the following:
- Quantities and Units, ISO Standards Handbook, 3rd ed. (International Organization for Standardization, Geneva, Switzerland, 1993).
- Quantities, Units and Symbols in Physical Chemistry (the Green Book), 3rd ed. (IUPAC, RSC Publishing, Cambridge, 2007).
- Symbols, Units and Nomenclature in Physics, IUPAP Document IUPAP 25, 1985. [Reproduced in Physica A 146, 1 (1987)].
- A. Thompson and B. N. Taylor, Guide for the Use of the International System of Units (SI), NIST Special Pub. 811, 2008 edition (NIST, Gaithersburg, MD, 2008).
The International System of Units (SI) should always be used unless the Editor has granted an exception. The nomenclature practices of Chemical Abstracts, or those based on IUPAC recommendations, should be followed. If you are preparing compound indices for your paper, please consult the current CA Index Guide. It is desirable to include CAS Registry Numbers in papers that give data for multiple chemical compounds.
Please follow the conventions for using roman and italic fonts. Roman (non-italic) font is always used for chemical formulas, units, numbers, mathematical constants, and operators (∏ and ln), and descriptive terms. Italic font is used to denote variables, physical quantities, and functions.
The following are some examples of correct usage:
Tmin = 273 K (italicize physical quantity temperature and not descriptive “min” or “K”)
(Do not italicize operator “exp” or subscript “B” for Boltzmann.)
Avoid the ambiguous term “log”; natural logarithms should be written “ln” (preferred) or “loge” while base-10 logarithms should be written “lg” or “log10”. Please use a minus sign (−) rather than a hyphen (-) to denote negative numbers or subtraction. Superscripts or subscripts should be formatted through the font group rather than raising or lowering individual characters.
List of symbols
A list of symbols is optional. It is recommended to use a list of symbols if the paper contains many symbols, whose meaning is not obvious, especially if the paper is relatively long. Otherwise, symbols should be defined when they first appear in text.
Headings and subheadings
Headings and subheadings in the text should have a maximum of four levels and should be numbered as follows:
- 1. (Main level)
- 1.1. (Second Level)
- 1.1.1. (Third level)
- 1.1.1.1. (Fourth level)
The first level is normally “1. Introduction” and the last is “References.” Please refer to the sections in text as “Sec. 1.1”, etc., except at the beginning of a sentence where “Section 1.1” should be used.
Journal of Rheology (JOR)
Preparing Your Graphics
When possible, authors are encouraged to adjust their figures for the black and white hard copy version of the journal. For example, using different symbols (i.e., circles, squares, etc.) or different types of lines (i.e., dashed lines, dotted lines, etc.) is useful to those who are viewing the figure in black and white instead of color. Please see the “Color Printing Charges” section of the author guidelines for additional information on preparing graphics suitable for the print journal.
Nomenclature
Authors are asked to comply with the official nomenclature and symbols of the Society of Rheology: https://pubs.aip.org/sor/jor/pages/nomenclature
Nanotechnology and Precision Engineering (NPE)
Formatting
- Special characters such as “μ” in “μm” and “μs” should not be italicized.
- Variables should be in italic. Their subscripts or superscripts, if they are also variables, should be italicized. For example, with “Ti, i=1,2,3…,” then “i” should be in italic. However, if the subscripts or superscripts are not variables, they should not be italicized. For example, if defining the temperature of a door and window as “Td” and “Tw” then “d” and “w” should not be italicized.
- The natural logarithm base “e”, imaginary unit “I”, and pi “π” (when it equals 3.14159…) should not be bold or italic.
- Vectors and matrices should be both bold and italic.
- Points should be in italic, such as O(x,y), P(m,n), while the comma and parentheses should not be italicized.
- Variables in figures and tables should be formatted the same as in the text.
- For phrases in figures and tables, only the initial letter of the first word should be capitalized.
- There should be a space between a number and unit.
- Identify all figure parts with (a), (b), etc. Avoid any large size differences of the lettering and labels used within one illustration.
For more instructions, please refer to: https://publishing.aip.org/resources/researchers/author-instructions/
Physics of Fluids (POF)
Letters
The purpose of the Letters section is to provide rapid publication of important and time-sensitive new results in the fields regularly covered by Physics of Fluids, in the form of a condensed communication.
- Results of extended research should not be presented as a series of Letters in place of comprehensive articles.
- Except for length, Letters manuscripts have the same criteria as longer articles. However, there is usually a three-month time limit, from date of receipt to acceptance, for processing Letters manuscripts. Timeliness, current importance of the subject matter, brevity, and clarity of presentation determine the acceptability of contributions.
- Feasibility studies and proposals for future research are not appropriate for the Letters section and will rarely be accepted.
- When submitting a manuscript, you need to include a brief statement justifying its rapid (and time-critical) publication in the Letters section.
- Each Letter should be self-contained and may, on occasion, be followed by a comprehensive article in Physics of Fluids or elsewhere.
- Letters are limited to seven (7) printed pages in length, including space for title, figures, tables, references, and the abstract limited to 100 words; Letters do not have section headings.
Please use these guidelines for estimating length of POF Letters.
LaTeX users
Authors are advised to use the LaTeX template. If the version of the manuscript obtained using the “reprint” option fits on approximately seven (7) pages (excluding abstract, title, author list, references, and acknowledgments), the length is acceptable.
Word users
Highlight the manuscript text, excluding abstract, author list, acknowledgments, and references, making note of the word count at the bottom of the screen. Add to that the word-count equivalents for figures, tables, and equations as follows:
- Figures: An average single-column figure will displace 200 words; an average double column figure will displace 400 words
- Tables: 6.5 words per line, plus 13 words for single-column tables. 13 words per line, plus 26 words for double-column tables.
- Equations: 7 words per line for single-column equations. 13 words per line for double-column equations.
If the total number of words (text + figures + tables + equations) is 6125 or less, the length is acceptable.
Comments and Responses
As POF Comments and Responses each have a length limit of two journal pages, manuscripts should not exceed 1750 words.
Please use these guidelines for estimating length of a Comment or a Response.
LaTeX users
Authors are advised to use the LaTeX template. If the version of the manuscript obtained using the “reprint” option fits on approximately two (2) pages (excluding abstract, title, author list, references, and acknowledgments), the length is acceptable.
Word users
Highlight the manuscript text, excluding abstract, author list, acknowledgments, and references, making note of the word count at the bottom of the screen. Add to that the word-count equivalents for figures, tables, and equations as follows:
- Figures: An average single-column figure will displace 200 words; an average double column figure will displace 400 words
- Tables: 6.5 words per line, plus 13 words for single-column tables. 13 words per line, plus 26 words for double-column tables.
- Equations: 7 words per line for single-column equations. 13 words per line for double-column equations.
If the total number of words (text + figures + tables + equations) is 1750 or less, the length is acceptable.
Reference list
Including the article title of journals on the reference list is preferred by the community. As such, we ask that you please style your references, as follows:
Physics of Plasmas (POP)
Manuscript Length for POP Letters and Brief Communications
Manuscripts for Letters and Brief Communications in Physics of Plasmas should not exceed 3500 words (approximately four printed journal pages). Please note that the abstract, title, author list, references, and acknowledgments are all excluded from the 3500-word limit. Figures, tables, and equations, however, are included and need to be accounted for by calculating a word-count equivalent to the space they occupy.
Please use these guidelines for estimating length of PoP Letters and Brief Communications
LaTeX users
Authors are advised to use the LaTeX template. If the version of the manuscript obtained using the “reprint” option fits on approximately four pages (excluding abstract, title, author list, references, and acknowledgments), the length is acceptable.
Word users
Highlight the manuscript text, excluding abstract, author list, acknowledgments, and references, and note the word count at the bottom of the screen. Add to that the word-count equivalents for figures, tables and equations as follows:
- Figures: An average single-column figure will displace 200 words. An average double-column figure will displace 400 words.
- Tables: 6.5 words per line, plus 13 words for single-column tables. 13 words per line, plus 26 words for double-column tables.
- Equations: 7 words per line for single-column equations. 13 words per line for double-column equations.
If the total number of words (text + figures + tables + equations) is 3500 or less, the length is acceptable.
Physics of Plasmas Data Accessibility Project
AIP Publishing and Physics of Plasmas have partnered with Zenodo to help you create links to share the datasets underlying your figures and tables.
Benefits of participation
- The Data Accessibility Project will PROVIDE ACCESS to the datasets underlying figures and tables in the published articles.
- Datasets will become available, discoverable, CITABLE, and reusable.
- Datasets will be OPEN ACCESS, provided with persistent identifiers, and linked from the articles.
- Datasets will undergo PEER REVIEW.
- The Data Accessibility Project REDUCES BARRIERS to advancing research.
- SUPPORTS RESEARCHERS in complying with some funding agencies’ mandates.
Making your data accessible from your Physics of Plasmas paper in 3 simple steps:
- Click here to create an account and deposit your dataset with Zenodo. Write down the doi (digital object identifier) assigned by Zenodo to each upload.
- For each dataset you share, cite the doi url in the respective figure/table caption in your manuscript.
Citing a dataset in a figure caption:
FIG. 4. This is a usual figure caption in your manuscript. [Associated dataset available at http://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.45520] (Ref. 5).
Citing a dataset as a “Note” in a table caption:2.0 362 11.25 4.28 3.0 1033 10.23 4.23 Note: Associated dataset available at http://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.45520 (Ref. 5).
- Include the citation to the dataset(s) in the reference list of your manuscript providing Include the citation to the dataset(s) in the reference list of your manuscript providing the following required elements: Creator(s), Publication Year, Title, Publisher, and Identifier and may contain these optional elements: Version and Resource Type.
Example of a dataset reference with required elements and optional elements of version and resource type:
Created by OpenAIRE and CERN in 2013, Zenodo is an open digital repository for everyone and every research output, addressing in particular the needs of those not served by a dedicated service; the so called “long tail” of research results.
Proposals for Perspective, Review, and Tutorial Articles in Physics of Plasmas
If you plan to write a Perspective, Review, or Tutorial for Physics of Plasmas, please complete the respective form, and send it to the Editorial Team at POP-JournalManager@aip.org.
- POP Editorial Summary Form – Perspectives
- POP Editorial Summary Form – Reviews
- POP Editorial Summary Form – Tutorials
The editors will review your proposal and provide feedback on its suitability for Physics of Plasmas. Editor comments will help you write your paper with the best chance of positive review and fast publication.
If you have already written a paper, please submit it directly at http://pop.peerx-press.org without completing a Summary Form. Instructions for preparing Perspectives and Tutorials are given below.
Preparing your Perspective Manuscript for Physics of Plasmas
Perspectives are articles on focused topics of current interest in plasma physics research.
- Editors commission recognized experts in the field to write these articles.
- Authors writing a perspective article provide an objective and balanced overview of recent advances within the field and, importantly, provide their unique views on where the field is headed and promising strategies for progress.
- Perspectives are not Review articles.
- Perspectives may be submitted by a single author or from multiple co-authors.
- All Perspectives are subject to peer review. An invitation from the editors does not guarantee acceptance.
When preparing your Perspective manuscript, please consider the following general guidelines:
- Recommended length in print: We suggest 5–10 pages, although longer articles are also appropriate.
- Title: Use a short descriptive title to attract readers’ attention.
- Figures: There is no limit to the number of figures that can be included in the article.
- Video/multimedia: Including these in your manuscript is encouraged.
- Number of references: There is no limit to the number of references that can be included in the article.
- Permissions: If you are reusing material from previously published work, please be sure to obtain the proper permissions for publication. We recommend that you request permissions as soon as possible to avoid publication delays. For more information on permissions, please see https://publishing.aip.org/authors/author-permission-faq.
- While no specific format is required for Perspective articles, we recommend that you include:
- A brief, concise assessment of the status of the field: This assessment should focus on the last 3–5 years of research and can be written either in a brief overview or by presenting new, unpublished results from the author’s own research. Please note: Extensive reviews of the field are not appropriate for a Perspective article, and brief overviews should constitute no more than 50 percent of the total article.
- A unique, forward look at where the field is headed: Perspectives are characterized by the personal views and opinions of the author (or authors) as an expert in the field. Authors are encouraged to focus on newly implemented innovations and their broad-ranging implications for the area of study, identify open questions that need to be addressed, and propose or support new hypotheses.
Preparing your Tutorial Manuscript for Physics of Plasmas
Tutorials are graduate-level educational tools used to help shape the new generation of researchers in plasma physics. They also support researchers who are interested in improving their knowledge of and skills in particular areas.
- Tutorials do not have to provide original research content.
- They should explain the principles and techniques in a particular research area with an educational perspective.
- They need to convey a broad overview of the objectives, results, and open question for that area.
- Tutorials may be as short as 3–5 printed pages or as long as 10–15 printed pages.
- They are screen by the Editor-in-Chief, assisted by the Associate Editor.
- Once a Tutorial manuscript is accepted, it will go through the same peer review process and needs to meet the same high standards as regularly published papers.
Considering the purpose of a Tutorial, referees will write their reviews on the following points:
- Is the Tutorial aimed at the appropriate level for the Physics of Plasmas readership?
- Is the research area covered with enough depth and broad perspective (for extended Tutorials)? Can the presentation be improved?
- Is the topic of the Tutorial timely?
- Does the reference list appear to be appropriate? Are the references too one-dimensional, i.e., directed toward the author’s own research or research at the author’s institution? Do the references provide adequate background references to allow readers to put the work in context with previous and current work?
- Is the Tutorial written in clear English, so editors, reviewers, and readers can fully understand it?
The Journal of Renewable and Sustainable Energy (JRSE)
The Journal of Renewable and Sustainable Energy Data Accessibility Project
AIP Publishing and The Journal of Renewable and Sustainable Energy have partnered with Zenodo to help you create links to share the datasets underlying your figures and tables.
Benefits of participation
- The Data Accessibility Project will PROVIDE ACCESS to the datasets underlying figures and tables in the published articles.
- Datasets will become available, discoverable, CITABLE, and reusable.
- Datasets will be OPEN ACCESS, provided with persistent identifiers, and linked from the articles.
- Datasets will undergo PEER REVIEW.
- The Data Accessibility Project REDUCES BARRIERS to advancing research.
- SUPPORTS RESEARCHERS in complying with some funding agencies’ mandates.
Making your data accessible from your The Journal of Renewable and Sustainable Energy paper in 3 simple steps:
- Click here to create an account and deposit your dataset with Zenodo. Write down the doi (digital object identifier) assigned by Zenodo to each upload.
- For each dataset you share, cite the doi url in the respective figure/table caption in your manuscript.
Citing a dataset in a figure caption:
FIG. 4. This is a usual figure caption in your manuscript. [Associated dataset available at http://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.45520] (Ref. 5).
Citing a dataset as a “Note” in a table caption:2.0 362 11.25 4.28 3.0 1033 10.23 4.23 Note: Associated dataset available at http://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.45520 (Ref. 5).
- Include the citation to the dataset(s) in the reference list of your manuscript providing Include the citation to the dataset(s) in the reference list of your manuscript providing the following required elements: Creator(s), Publication Year, Title, Publisher, and Identifier and may contain these optional elements: Version and Resource Type.
Example of a dataset reference with required elements and optional elements of version and resource type:
Created by OpenAIRE and CERN in 2013, Zenodo is an open digital repository for everyone and every research output, addressing in particular the needs of those not served by a dedicated service; the so called “long tail” of research results.
Preparing your Perspective Manuscript for The Journal of Renewable and Sustainable Energy
JRSE publishes short Perspectives that emphasize authors’ unique views and opinions on the state of a field of research in renewable energy disciplines.
- Perspectives discuss recent advances in a subfield of energy research and where the research is headed.
- They are not review articles: the authors present their personal views and opinions on developments that could lead to disruptive technologies, open questions, and possible solutions.
- Perspectives need to be written in clear English with a descriptive Title and Abstract that explain the manuscript’s contents, consistent with the standards for publication in Journal of Renewable and Sustainable Energy.
- For more information on Perspectives, view the journal’s Editorial Policies: http://pubs.aip.org/aip/jrse/pages/policies
Considering the purpose of a Perspective Manuscript, referees will write their reviews on the following points:
- Is the topic of the Perspective focused and timely?
- Is the Perspective presenting a unique look at where the field is headed characterized by the personal views and opinions of the author as an expert in the field?
- Is the Perspective free of commercial content and free of excessive author bias toward a particular product or industry?
Review of Scientific Instruments (RSI)
Length Restriction for Conference Articles
Conference Articles are contributed and invited proceedings from conferences published by Review of Scientific Instruments, including the High-Temperature Plasma Diagnostic Conference and the International Conference on Ion Sources. Manuscripts should not exceed 5 journal pages, or approximately 4000 words, for a contributed paper and not exceed 9 journal pages, or approximately 7500 words, for an invited paper.
Please use these guidelines below may be used for estimating length.
TeX users
Authors are recommended to use the AIP Publishing template in Overleaf. The manuscript cannot exceed five pages for contributed Conference Articles or nine pages for invited Conference Articles.
Word users
Highlight the manuscript text, excluding the abstract, author list, acknowledgments, and references, and note the word count at the bottom of the screen. Add to that the word-count- equivalents for figures, tables, and equations as follows:
- Figures: An average single-column figure will displace 260 words; an average double column figure will displace 550 words.
- Tables: 5 words per line, plus 13 words for single-column tables. 13 words per line, plus 26 words for double-column tables. Equations: 7 words per line for single-column equations. 13 words per line for double-column equations.
If the total number of words (text + figures + tables + equations) is 4000 or less for a contributed Conference Article, or 7500 or less for an invited Conference Article, the length is acceptable.
Structural Dynamics (SDY)
Structural Data for Biological Macromolecules
Authors reporting new crystal structures need to adhere to the following requirements:
- Deposit the atomic coordinates and related experimental data (i.e., structure factor amplitudes/intensities, NMR restraints) in a member site of the Worldwide Protein Data Bank (wwPDB).
- Agree to immediately release such data upon publication of their manuscript.
- Include the accession number(s) in the experimental section of the manuscript.
- Include the PDB validation reports as “Additional Material for Reviewers” at the time the manuscript is submitted. (These reports will be used for peer review purposes and will not be published along with the final manuscript.)
Short Communications
Since Short Communications have a length limit of 4 journal pages, manuscripts should not exceed 3500 words.
Please use these guidelines for estimating the length of Short Communications
LaTeX users
Authors are advised to use the LaTeX template. If the version of the manuscript obtained using the “reprint” option fits on four pages, the length is acceptable.
Word users
Highlight the manuscript text, excluding the abstract, author list, acknowledgments, and references, and note the word count at the bottom of the screen. Add to that the word-count equivalents for figures, tables, and equations as follows:
- Figures: 400 words for an average figure.
- Tables: 13 words per line, plus 26 words for double-column tables.
- Equations: 13 words per line.
If the total number of words (text + figures + tables + equations) is 3500 or less, the length is acceptable.
Reference List
Including the article title of journals on the reference list is preferred by the community. As such, we ask that you please style your references as follows:G. Imani, L. Zhang, C. Xu, M. Ntibahanana, H. Sun, and J. Yao, “Finite droplets vs long droplets: Discrepancy in release conditions in a microscopic constricted channel,” Phys. Fluids 35(3), 032101 (2023).