Unsaturated Sulfonic Acids. 1 Addition of Diazomethane and Phenyl Azide to Derivatives of Ethylenesulfonic Acid and its Homologs 2.
J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2019, 141, 3171-3177Guo, Zhang, Zhu et al.
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Impact factor: 6.641*
Publishing frequency: 48 issues per year Editor-in-chief: Peter Skabara Time to first decision: 26 days** Scope
Journal of Materials Chemistry A, B & C cover high quality studies across all fields of materials chemistry. The journals focus on those theoretical or experimental studies that report new understanding, applications, properties and synthesis of materials. The journals have a strong history of publishing quality reports of interest to interdisciplinary communities and providing an efficient and rigorous service through peer review and publication. The journals are led by an international team of Editors-in-Chief and Associate Editors who are all active researchers in their fields.
Journal of Materials Chemistry A, B & C are separated by the intended application of the material studied. Broadly, applications in energy and sustainability are of interest to Journal of Materials Chemistry A, applications in biology and medicine are of interest to Journal of Materials Chemistry B, and applications in optical, magnetic and electronic devices are of interest to Journal of Materials Chemistry C. More than one Journal of Materials Chemistry journal may be suitable for certain fields and researchers are encouraged to submit their paper to the journal that they feel best fits for their particular article.
Example topic areas within the scope of Journal of Materials Chemistry C are listed below. This list is neither exhaustive nor exclusive.
Editor-in-chief
Peter Skabara, University of Glasgow, UK
Associate editors
Laylay Chua, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Luis Hueso, CIC nanoGUNE, Spain
Malika Jeffries-El, Boston University, USA
Unyong Jeong, POSTECH, South Korea
Monica Lira-Cantú, Catalan Institute of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology, Spain
Martyn McLachlan, Imperial College London, UK
Neil Robertson, University of Edinburgh, UK
Federico Rosei, National Institute of Scientific Research, University of Quebec, Canada
Natalie Stingelin, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA
Wai-Yeung Wong, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong
Yadong Yin, University of California, Riverside, USA
Xiaowei Zhan, Peking University, China
Ni Zhao, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Advisory board
Chunli Bai, Key Laboratory of Molecular Nanostructure and Nanotechnology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Eric Bittner, University of Houston, USA
Timothy Bunning, Air Force Research Laboratory, USA
Juan Casado, University of Malaga, Spain
Rajadurai Chandrasekar, University of Hyderbad, India
Yen-Ju Cheng, National Chiao Tung University, Taiwan
Manish Chhowalla, Rutgers - The State University of New Jersey, USA
Chunyan Chi, National University of Singapore, Singapore
David Evans, Beijing University of Chemical Technology, China
Mark Green, King's College London, UK
Justin Holmes, University College Cork, Ireland
Cheol Seong Hwang, Seoul National University, Korea
Mercouri Kanatzidis, Northwestern University, USA
Takashi Kato, University of Tokyo, Japan
Junji Kido, Yamagata University, Japan
Akiko Kobayashi, Nihon University, Japan
Hua Kuang, Jiangnan University, China
Seth Marder, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA
Jianyong Ouyang, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Erin Ratcliff, University of Arizona, USA
Paolo Samorì, Institut de Science et d’Ingénierie Supramoléculaires, University of Strasbourg, France
Ram Seshadri, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA
Roberta Sessoli, University of Florence, Italy
Zhigang Shuai, Tsinghua University, China
Carlos Silva, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA
Jeff Snyder, Northwestern University, Illinois, USA
Christoph Weder, Adolphe Merkle Institute, Switzerland
Greg Welch, University of Calgary, Canada
Patrick Woodward, Ohio State University, USA
Anatoly Zayats, King's College London, UK
Qichun Zhang, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
Editorial office
Sam Keltie, Executive Editor ORCID 0000-0002-9369-8414
Lynn Murphy, Deputy Editor
Rose Wedgbury, Development Editor ORCID 0000-0002-7192-5401
Jonathon Watson, Editorial Production Manager
Jack Busby, Senior Publishing Editor
Matthew Blow, Publishing Editor
Daniella Ferluccio, Publishing Editor
Geraldine Hay, Publishing Editor
Eloise Laity, Publishing Editor
Carole Martin, Publishing Editor
Millie Newman, Publishing Editor
Eve Rooks, Publishing Editor
Kate Bandoo, Editorial Assistant
Jane Chan, Publishing Assistant
Julie Ann Roszkowski, Publishing Assistant
Lectureship
Journal of Materials Chemistry Lectureship
This Lectureship recognises early career researchers, within 10 years of their PhD, who have made a significant contribution to the field of materials chemistry in their independent academic career.
This award is presented annually. Nominations open in the spring. The winner is announced in the autumn.
Royal Society of Chemistry Associate Editors in appropriate fields are asked to nominate candidates, providing a cover letter and the nominee’s CV. Nominations are also open to the public for one week before the deadline. Self-nominations are accepted. Shortlisted candidates from the previous year, who are still eligible, are automatically renominated.
Nominations are then shortlisted and the winner selected by the Journal of Materials Chemistry Executive Editorial Board.
The recipient of this award receives: the opportunity to present at a relevant high-profile meeting and a contribution of up to £1,000 to cover associated travel and accommodation costs. Also, an invitation to submit an article to one of the Journal of Materials Chemistry journals and a complimentary back cover advert for the issue in which the article appears.
Latest recipient:Shaojun Guo Peking University, China
Article types
Journal of Materials Chemistry C publishes:
Communications
Journal of Materials Chemistry C Communications contain novel scientific work of such importance that rapid publication is desirable. Authors should briefly indicate in a covering letter the reasons why they feel that publication of their work as a Communication is justified. The recommended length is three printed journal pages.
Full papers
Full papers contain original scientific work that has not been published previously.
Reviews & Perspectives
These are normally invited by the Editorial Board and editorial office, although suggestions from readers for topics and authors of reviews are welcome. Interested review authors should complete a review proposal form and return it to the editor at [email protected].
Reviews and Perspectives must be high quality, authoritative, state-of-the-art accounts of the selected research field. They should be timely and add to the existing literature, rather than duplicate existing articles, and should be of general interest to the journal's wide readership.
All Reviews and Perspectives undergo rigorous peer review, in the same way as regular research papers.
Reviews should report a detailed, balanced and authoritative current account of the existing state of knowledge on a particular facet of materials chemistry research for optical, magnetic and electronic devices. Simple literature surveys will not be accepted for publication. Reviews should not contain unpublished original research.
Highlight articles are short articles that highlight important new developments. Unlike Review articles, these are intended to cover developments made over the past year or so. They should explain the significance of these developments and may also identify where further work is urgently required or where challenges are still faced. These articles should discuss emerging areas of relevance to materials. Highlights should not contain unpublished original research.
Perspectives are short readable articles covering current areas of interest. They may take the form of personal accounts of research or a critical analysis of activity in a specialist area. By their nature they will not be comprehensive reviews of a field of materials chemistry. Some new unpublished research may be included.
Comments/Replies
Comments and Replies are a medium for the discussion and exchange of scientific opinions between authors and readers concerning material published in Journal of Materials Chemistry C.
For publication, a Comment should present an alternative analysis of and/or new insight into the previously published material. Any Reply should further the discussion presented in the original article and the Comment. Comments and Replies that contain any form of personal attack are not suitable for publication.
Comments that are acceptable for publication will be forwarded to the authors of the work being discussed, and these authors will be given the opportunity to submit a Reply. The Comment and Reply will both be subject to rigorous peer review in consultation with the journal’s Editorial Board where appropriate. The Comment and Reply will be published together.
Journal specific guidelinesThe following guidelines are journal specific. For general guidance on preparing an article please visit our Prepare your article page, the content of which is relevant to all of our journals. Guideline statement
Authors and referees should note the following guidelines for articles reporting the efficiency of solar conversion devices. Authors should ensure the following information is provided in the main manuscript or supplementary information as appropriate.
A full, conventional error analysis should be carried out and reported. This should consist of both random and systematic/bias analyses of values to support the main claims presented in the article, and information on how the error analysis was carried out. Efficiencies should be reported to an appropriate number of significant figures, along with a standard deviation. This also includes presenting error bars on graphs. A sufficient number of samples should be tested, and a sufficient number of trials performed. The 1 Sun AM 1.5G reference spectrum should be used as standard for testing power conversion efficiency and a justification provided where this is not used. Full experimental conditions under which the efficiency is measured should be declared. Special attention should be paid to documenting the active area of the device, the calibration protocol and properties of the illumination including spectral irradiance and intensity. This may also include as appropriate, but is not limited to, air temperature, use of a glove box, properties and characteristics of the test cell and standardized cell used for calibration, including dimensions and spatial non-uniformity, and calibration and measurement protocols. Independent certification of the photovoltaic performance of the device being reported is encouraged when the main claims rely on the absolute efficiency value being reported. If incident photon-to-current efficiency (IPCE), also referred to as external quantum efficiency (EQE) measurements are performed, the results should be integrated to a resulting short circuit current that can be compared with 1 Sun AM 1.5G power conversion efficiency data. The details of how this calculation is done and any correction factors should be clearly defined. If hysteresis is observed, details on timescale and stability of the efficiency should be provided. Readership information
Journal of Materials Chemistry C is a core journal for academic and industrial scientists involved in materials research.
Subscription information
Journal of Materials Chemistry C is part of collections RSC Gold, Core Chemistry and Materials Science
Print + online 2019: ISSN 2050-7526 £2,181 / $3,500 Online only 2019: ISSN 2050-7534 £2,077 / $3,333
*2018 Journal Citation Reports (Clarivate Analytics, 2019)
**average time from receipt to first decision in 2018
Journal of Materials Chemistry C
Pre-submission queries please contact Sam Keltie, Executive Editor
Post-submission queries please contact Jonathon Watson, Editorial Production Manager
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