万维提示:
1、投稿方式:在线投稿。
2、期刊网址:
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/21935815
3、投稿网址:
https://www.editorialmanager.com/asianjoc/
4、官网邮箱:asianjoc@wiley-vch.de
5、期刊刊期:月刊,一年出版十二期。
2021年4月12日星期一
投稿须知【官网信息】
Notice to Authors
In Brief
Quick Checklist: Submission
Essential
i.Write in English. ii.Include all text, Schemes, Figures, Tables, and the table of contents text and image in a single manuscript file. iii.Include Supporting Information (where applicable) as a separate PDF file and media and data files as appropriate. See Section 3 for details. iv.Include a cover letter in which the relevance and importance of the work are succinctly outlined. v.Include your suggestions for impartial reviewers and Editorial Board member(s) to assess your manuscript, and note those with whom you have a conflict of interest. vi.Submit all files through Editorial Manager. vii.Inform us if you have a related paper in submission/peer review/publishing elsewhere. viii.Inform us of any corresponding preprint(s) posted.
Helpful for faster evaluation
i.Use the MS Word and ChemDraw templates. ii.Inform us if the manuscript has been professionally edited by a service such as Wiley Editing Services. iii.Inform us if the manuscript has previously been submitted to another Wiley journal and/or if you have a related paper in submission/peer review/publishing elsewhere.
Quick Checklist: Manuscript Contents
i.Abstract (max. 150 words). ii.Comprehensive experimental section and characterization data (see Section 3.4). iii.Supporting Information (see Sections 3.2 and 3.4). iv.Table of contents graphic with accompanying text up to 50 words (see Section 3.3 and Section 5.6). v.Keywords in alphabetical order including at least two from the core keyword list (see Section 3.6). vi.Declaration of approval for animal, human, or tissue experiments in the Editorial Manager submission form AND in the Experimental Section of the manuscript/Supporting Information (see Section 5.1.2). vii.For Minireviews only: a frontispiece image (18×18 cm; guide), biographies (70–100 words), and portrait photographs of the author(s).
Quick Checklist: After Acceptance
Essential
i.Upload the manuscript file and Supporting Information (if applicable) as separate files through the "Manuscripts for Production" menu on your personal homepage in Editorial Manager. PDF files are required for the Accepted Article format (published immediately after acceptance and before copy editing), and a Word file (.doc, .docx) is required for preparation of the proof and the Early View article (see Section 4). After uploading these files, the next opportunity to make changes will be when you receive the proofs for correction. ii.All graphics must be included in the relevant Word or PDF file (not separately). Embed all chemical structures in ChemDraw format (.cdx, ChemDraw template) and all other images as high-resolution (300 dpi) .jpeg, .tif, .png, or similar in the manuscript text file. Each Scheme and Figure should be embedded as a single image (see Section 3.3).
Optional
i.Suggest a cover image (15.6×15.6 cm; guide) without a white background, which adheres to Section 5.6 of these guidelines. ii.Complete the open access order form.
1. About the Journal
The Asian Journal of Organic Chemistry (AsianJOC) is a journal of the Asian Chemical Editorial Society (ACES), a group of 12 major chemical societies from Asia and the Pacific. AsianJOC is published by Wiley-VCH and it is a sister journal of the European Journal of Organic Chemistry, and also of the ACES journals Chemistry—An Asian Journal and ChemNanoMat. All general formal aspects of manuscript styling are the same within this family of journals.
AsianJOC publishes Minireviews, Communications, and Full Papers from all fields of organic chemistry.
Submissions are evaluated by professional editors with the help of Editorial Board members and, those deemed suitable for the journal in terms of scope, quality, and novelty, are subject to peer review. Contributions that are not considered suitable for the journal are returned to the author(s) without external review; the editor may recommend transferal to an appropriate sister journal simultaneously. When a manuscript is sent for external review, the editor will avoid any known conflict of interest. Reviewers suggested by the author(s) may or may not be invited, at the editor´s discretion; the editor will exclude named opposed reviewers, subject to the ethical guidelines. AsianJOC operates a strict single-blind peer-review process. After peer review, a decision of accept, reject, or revision is made on the basis of the reviewers′ comments and the judgment of the editor. Revised manuscripts are evaluated by the editor and, if required, by reviewers. In case of ambiguity, a board member or a top adjudicative reviewer is consulted for advice. All invited and transferred manuscripts, as well as contributions by the journal´s board members, undergo the same peer-review process (as outlined above) as unsolicited manuscripts. The final decision to accept or reject a manuscript rests with the editor. The editor may arrange for a rejected manuscript to be transferred to a sister journal where it may be published after appropriate revision. If authors choose to pursue this option, their manuscript along with the reviewer reports is transferred to the receiving journal to expedite any further evaluation and the editor′s decision. The primary objective of this collaboration is to reduce the incidence of redundant reviews, thus lessening the burden on the already overstretched community of reviewers.
To aid transparency during the peer-review process, reviewers may access reports associated with a manuscript they have peer reviewed by logging onto the journal´s Editorial Manager manuscript submission site and viewing the reviewer comments under their completed assignments. Reviewers also have the option to view their own reviewing history. Reports are presented anonymously to protect the identity of all reviewers. Reviewers can record reviewing activities as they submit their report through Editorial Manager (that is, not retroactively). This function links up to ORCID, provider of persistent digital identifiers for researchers, and Publons, a commercial peer-review tracker. Both sites log peer-review activity at specific journals in the form of an authenticated, anonymized list that can be included in a researcher´s résumé.
The correspondence author will receive page proofs as a PDF and Word document. After the article has been published in an issue, authors can share a read-only version of their article for free using the Wiley Article Share service. For more information on sharing published articles, please refer to the Article Sharing Policy. Please see the Copyright Transfer Agreement for terms of use of both the Accepted Version and the Final Published Version. There are no page charges for articles published in AsianJOC and color is free of charge for article graphics.
Authors are requested to submit their manuscripts through our online submission service Editorial Manager (www.editorialmanager.com/asianjoc); please note that ORCID registration and authentication is required for submission of the manuscript, and the submitting author must be a corresponding author. The submitting author can follow the progress of the manuscript on the personal homepage (www.editorialmanager.com/asianjoc), which is created upon initial registration.
To make sure that references to this journal are correctly recorded and resolved (for example in CrossRef, PubMed, or ISI Web of Knowledge), please use the following abbreviated title in any citations: "Asian J. Org. Chem."
We recommend that authors provide a link to their publication on their homepage through the Digital Object Identifier (DOI).
Queries regarding manuscripts should be sent to AsianJOC@wiley-vch.de.
Information for Authors
Angewandte Chemie, Chemistry Europe, and Asian Chemical Editorial Society (ACES) journals will consider submitted papers that have been previously 1) posted as a preprint on a non-profit community preprint server such as ChemRxiv, bioRxiv, and arXiv (see the preprint guidelines). Or 2) published as a thesis prepared toward completion of a graduate degree at a university or technical institute of learning. Only the original submitted version of a manuscript is allowed to be posted as a preprint. Manuscripts previously published in other contexts will not be considered, at the discretion of the editor.
The authors must inform the Editor of manuscripts submitted, soon to be submitted, in press or published at other journals or posted on any preprint server, that have a bearing on the manuscript being submitted to any journal in the Angewandte Chemie, Chemistry Europe, and ACES journal family.
In the case of preprints, journals require that the material is not communicated with the media prior to publication of the paper in the journal family.
If the manuscript is a revised or extended version of a manuscript previously rejected by the receiving journal, the author must inform the editor about the previous submission in the cover letter and explain in detail which changes have been made. The journal may examine the prior history of manuscripts submitted to, but not accepted in, other Wiley-VCH journals, including Chemistry and Materials journals. The prior history of a manuscript can include reviewer reports obtained during prior peer review at another Wiley-VCH journal and, depending on the circumstances, the editor may take such reports into consideration (for example, to ensure that an author has carried out relevant revisions). To facilitate administration and evaluation, authors are encouraged to disclose such prior submissions in their cover letter and to address any reviewer comments, when applicable. Submissions to the receiving journals may not be under evaluation at any other journal at the time of submission.
The contributions of each author should be specified as "Contributor Roles" when all other information on the author is entered into Editorial Manager. Every author must be informed about the submission and must have agreed to the submitted version. Honorary authorship is forbidden.
For detailed advice about the Legal and Ethical Responsibilities of authors, including ethical declarations relating to human and animal experiments, conflict of interest, and copyright see Section 5 and the ethical guidelines.
In the event of acceptance, papers can be published online as Accepted Articles prior to editing and proofing. For more detail, including information about Open Access, see Section 4.
2. Article Types
Angewandte Chemie, Chemistry Europe, and ACES journals collectively publish the following article types: Communications, Research Articles, Full Papers, Reviews, Minireviews, Essays, Concepts, Highlights, Correspondences, and Corrigenda.
NOTE: Consult 1. About the Journal for the list of article types offered by your selected journal.
For detailed information on Manuscript Preparation see Section 3.
All templates are compiled under "Author Guidelines" on the journal′s webpage.
Communications, Research Articles, and Full Papers present the results of experimental or theoretical studies of general interest or great importance to the development of a specific area of research. A short cover letter justifying why the manuscript should appear in the journal should be submitted. A Communication should be no longer than 2500 words (ca. 20000 characters), including all references, footnotes, and Tables. Chemical formulae, Figures, Schemes and, when required, a concise summary of experimental and/or theoretical methods, may be included. For Research Articles (length up to 5600 words, ca. 40000 characters), the experimental details should be placed in the Supporting Information exclusively. Full Papers have no length restrictions and any Experimental Section and/or Computational Methods section should be illustrative of the research reported in the manuscript. Further detailed experimental methods and full characterization data must be included in the Supporting Information. Angewandte Chemie will not publish Research Articles, and Chemistry Europe and ACES journals will not publish Full Papers, which consist mainly of results reported in previous Communications with an added Experimental Section.
Reviews (length up to 14000 words, ca. 100000 characters, including footnotes, literature citations, Tables, and Figure captions) should be written by leading experts and deal with topics of high current interest in any area of chemistry. Rather than an assembly of detailed information with a complete literature survey, a critically selected treatment of the material is desired; unsolved problems and possible developments should also be discussed. Reviews should be divided into numbered sections. The Review starts with an abstract (length up to 150 words, ca. 1000 characters, no references) that should summarize the contents of the article and stimulate the readers′ interest. The Introduction should introduce non-specialists to the subject in a clear manner. A Review should conclude with a section titled "Summary and Outlook", in which the achievements and new challenges of the subject are presented succinctly. Biographical sketches (maximum length 84 words, ca. 560 characters) and portrait photographs of the correspondence authors should be submitted.
Minireviews (length up to 5600 words, ca. 40000 characters, including footnotes, literature citations, Tables, and Figure captions) should present current topics in a concise Review style. Minireviews offer the flexibility to treat topics at a time when a Review would still be premature or inappropriate. The general format is the same as that outlined for Reviews (above).
Essays (length up to 3500 words, ca. 25000 characters) are literary contributions that go beyond primary research data to reflect on scientific themes from every aspect of chemistry, including the philosophy or history of science. Essays should strive to answer the questions that a reader might have (e.g., what, how, why?) using supporting evidence, with emphasis on a concise and logical structure in which the discussion is balanced, and with a view to contributing to a constructive scientific discourse. Use of unpublished results from original research should be limited. Essays may be written by one or more authors. A biographical sketch (maximum length 80 words, ca. 560 characters) and a portrait photograph of the corresponding author should be submitted. Essays are screened in-house before external peer review for inappropriate content, such as that which contravenes the journal´s commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusivity (e.g., discriminatory content; see Section 5.7 “Unbiased Language”).
Viewpoints (length up to 2800 words, ca. 20000 characters) are opinion-based contributions that convey the author′s thoughts on important developments in a specific area and the implications for future research. Viewpoints may be controversial, however, it is incumbent on the author(s) to refute counter arguments with robust discussion. A biographical sketch (maximum length 80 words, ca. 560 characters) and a portrait photograph of the corresponding author may be submitted. Viewpoints are screened in-house before external peer review for inappropriate content, such as that which contravenes the journal´s commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusivity (e.g., discriminatory content; see Section 5.7 “Unbiased Language”).
Concepts (length up to 2400 words, ca. 17000 characters) are short articles that emphasize the general concepts that have guided important developments in a specific area and their implications for future research. The reference section should only include the key papers that have contributed to conceptual advances in the field under review, rather than being fully comprehensive. The author should aim to provide the non-specialist reader with a useful guide, and the expert with a new angle on a familiar problem. Concept articles may be organized as the author wishes, but should include a short Abstract (approximately 80–140 words, no references) that succinctly describes the concepts under discussion. Articles should consist of around 10 pages of text, including references, Tables, and legends. Liberal use of Schemes, Figures, and color is encouraged.
Highlights (length up to 1200 words, ca. 9000 characters) describe very important recent results of original research (preferably published online within the last month), in general by a third person, with a view to instruct and to highlight the significance of the findings. The results should be presented clearly and as succinctly as possible, without the comprehensive details required for an original article. Highlights should include only essential formulae and figures, as well as not more than 15 references. A Highlight should not be longer than two pages. Highlights should have no more than three authors (at the discretion of the editor), who should not have affiliations with the author(s) of the work being highlighted.
Correspondence or Comments on publications in Angewandte Chemie, Chemistry Europe, and ACES journals are welcome if they contribute to the scientific discussion. The author of the publication to which the Correspondence pertains will have the opportunity to reply. This reply will be sent to the author of the Correspondence.
Scientifically incorrect or incomplete information in published articles should be corrected in a Corrigendum, which is as short as possible. All corrigenda are subject to approval by the Editor, and minor corrections will not be published. We request that authors submit the Corrigendum electronically like any other article, and that they cite the publication to be corrected, as well as its DOI. Please note: readers with questions or concerns about published articles should contact the corresponding author of the article directly. It is the author′s responsibility to formulate an appropriate response to such approaches.
3. Manuscript Preparation
Contributions should be in British or in American English. Authors should submit their manuscripts through the online submission service Editorial Manager, which can be accessed through the "Submit a Manuscript" tab under "Contribute" on the journal′s webpage. Please prepare two files (if applicable): one containing the main manuscript (single-spaced text) with all graphics and tables integrated into the text at the appropriate position; the other containing the Supporting Information (see Section 3.4).
Templates for all article types (MS Word, ChemDraw, Endnote) are available on the journal homepage in the section "Author Guidelines". Templates help to judge the length (number of pages) of an article, but they do not reflect the exact final layout. It is not compulsory to use the templates, although reviewers may find it easier to evaluate a manuscript prepared in a template. Details for the preparation of the final revised version of accepted contributions ("Production Data") are provided in the checklist in the acceptance letter.
If you use LaTeX, please send standard LaTeX files only and a PDF file of the manuscript; please do not include your own style sheets or macros. Keep your file as simple as possible. It will not be used directly to typeset your manuscript, but will be converted prior to editing and typesetting (latex2rtf). For further details, consult our "Instructions for LaTeX users" on the journal homepage in the section "Author Guidelines".
The ORCID identifier is required for the submitting correspondence author on submission of a manuscript. We encourage all authors to provide an ORCID for each co-author as well. ORCID is a non-profit registry that provides researchers with a unique digital identifier. Some funding agencies recommend, or even require, the inclusion of ORCID numbers in all published articles; authors should consult their funding agency guidelines for details. Registration is easy and free; for further information see orcid.org.
3.1. Style
Authors are asked to make their manuscripts suitable for a heterogeneous readership. Use a simple, clear style, and avoid jargon. In some cases, it might be helpful for manuscripts to be checked by a third party for correct language usage before submission. Wiley Editing Services offers expert help with English language editing, as well as translation, manuscript formatting, Figure illustration and formatting, and graphical abstract design.
If possible, the standard Symbol font should be used to create Greek letters, rather than special characters or graphics embedded in the text.
Nomenclature, symbols, and units: the rules and recommendations of the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC), the International Union of Biochemistry (IUB), and the International Union of Pure and Applied Physics (IUPAP) should be adhered to.
Abbreviations and acronyms should be used sparingly and consistently. Where they first appear in the text, the complete term—apart from the most common ones such as NMR, IR, and tBu—should also be given.
3.2. Structure of Articles
The Title of a publication is the key point of entry for readers, abstracting services, and search engines. Therefore, the title should be informative, attract as many readers as possible to the work, and avoid acronyms and abbreviations if possible. In the title, the first letters of all words, except coordinating conjunctions, articles, and prepositions, should be capitalized. Please avoid chemical formulae in the title—they may complicate retrieval of your article by search engines or databases. No references may be cited.
Authorship is listed with the full given name and surname of each author, and an asterisk to indicate each correspondence author. A dedication line can also be included, which should be used to acknowledge noteworthy occasions or people, and/or any deceased co-authors. Authors have the option to include their names in non-Latin characters/alphabets (such as Asian characters) together with the English spelling in the HTML and PDF versions of their articles. Simply insert the non-Latin version in parentheses after the English version of each name in the author line of the manuscript.
The address field contains the names of all authors according to research group (with academic title and all first names as initials), the complete postal address (preferably in the country′s official language), and academic or institutional email address(es) of the correspondence author(s). For the non-correspondence authors, only the address of their academic institution or company is required. The correspondence author is welcome to include the web address for their research group.
An abstract presents the motivation for the work, the methods applied, the results, and the conclusions drawn. The abstract:
1)should reflect the contents of the paper, and the text should contain several keywords to aid retrieval of the paper online; 2)must not contain graphics, compound numbers (please use compound names), or references, as the abstract will be searchable independently from the rest of the manuscript (e.g., in databases); 3)should be easily accessible and keep abbreviations to a minimum; 4)should not be longer than a maximum of 150 words (ca. 1000 characters).
An Introduction enables readers unfamiliar with the subject to become acquainted with the importance of the results presented; relevant references should be included.
Communications should not be divided into sections. In Research Articles or Full Papers the presentation of Results and Discussion may be combined or kept separate. These sections may be further divided by subheadings.
In the Conclusion, the results should be summarized succinctly and with reference to the significance of the findings and, if appropriate, to the remaining challenges.
Experimental or computational details can be summarized separately under the heading Experimental Section or Computational Methods.
Important, ancillary information, which is relevant to the parent article but is not of sufficient general interest to include in the article itself, should be presented as Supporting Information (a PDF document that may be accompanied by additional supporting materials). The Supporting Information must be presented succinctly, in English, and may comprise additional Tables, data sets, Figures, movie files, and so on. The materials in the Supporting Information must be original and not previously published; otherwise, appropriate citations must be given. The Supporting Information is subject to peer review, and the author is solely responsible for its contents; thus, the scientific quality of the Supporting Information and the preparation of the text and graphics should be of the same standard as that in the actual publication (see Section 3.4 for reporting Experimental Data and Section 3.3 for preparation of graphical materials). The Supporting Information should start with a table of contents, and the relationships between the sections of the main article and the Supporting Information should be readily apparent.
Note that Angewandte Chemie, Chemistry Europe, and ACES journals encourage authors to share data and Supporting Information pertinent to the findings described in their paper by archiving such content in an appropriate public repository/database. See the Appendix: Reporting Experimental Information and Data, Section F. Data Deposition for examples of trusted repositories and visit re3data.org or fairsharing.org to help identify registered and certified data repositories relevant to your subject area. In such cases authors should provide a link to the repository/database (see Section 3.5), which will then be published alongside the paper. Learn about sharing and citing your research data.
Acknowledgments—especially for any financial support—are given as a separate paragraph at the end of the main text.
References to the literature (or to footnotes) are typed in square brackets as superscripts after punctuation. These are numbered consecutively and listed (with the numbers in square brackets) at the end of the main body of text. References should not contain comprehensive experimental details or long explanatory text. Authors must cite relevant resources; including but not limited to scientific journals, books, databases, preprints, websites, computer programs, and so on. The DOI should be used to cite papers available online for which page numbers have not yet been assigned. See Section 3.5 for detailed formatting requirements. The reference list should be fair and informative but not excessive. Copies of cited publications not yet available publicly, and with particular significance to the contribution under consideration, should be submitted along with the manuscript. Unpublished results and lectures should only be cited in exceptional circumstances. Please double-check your references to ensure (online) links are correct; for example, by using CrossRef.
Authors should provide a short Table of Contents graphical abstract and accompanying text on the last page of the manuscript with 1) a text of up to 50 words (ca. 450 characters), 2) an appropriate image (5.5×5.0 cm (w×h) or 11×2.5 cm (w×h), font size: 6–7 point), and 3) a maximum of five alphabetized keywords in American English. At least two of the keywords should be taken from the "Keyword Catalogue" (see Section 3.6). The graphical abstract should stimulate curiosity and it should adhere to the journal´s legal and ethical requirements (see Section 5). Repetition or paraphrasing of the title and experimental details should be avoided.
3.3. Graphics, Tables, and Multimedia
Please be aware of the ethical and copyright issues associated with production of graphical materials, including graphical abstracts and cover pictures (see Section 5).
High-quality graphical materials are an essential part of effective scientific communication and should be reproducible and legible in published media. Sans serif fonts (e.g., Arial) are strongly recommended for annotating graphics in a clear and attractive manner. All images (graphs, microscopy images, etc.) should be sized appropriately in a graphical program (e.g., Adobe Photoshop), and embedded in the Microsoft Word file as high resolution graphics (at least 300 dpi; .tif, .jpg, .png, or similar formats). The maximum size for one-column graphics is 8.4 cm and for two-column graphics 17.8 cm. Text should be 1.5 to 2 mm tall (about 7 or 8 point font size). All formulae, Figures, and Schemes must be legible unmagnified, when scaled for printing. Use the "insert graphic" option in Microsoft Word to embed graphical files in your word document. If a graphic contains several panels, the panels should first be combined into a single image before insertion into the manuscript text file. Within your Microsoft Word document, do not anchor or group images, and do not use formatting options in Microsoft Word (e.g., color adjustment) to alter embedded objects or graphics.
All chemical structures must be provided in ChemDraw format (.cdx). For faster processing, ensure chemical structures are embedded in the manuscript file. Use the "insert object" option in Microsoft Word to embed ChemDraw files in your document, or copy and paste the image directly from ChemDraw. The ChemDraw template provided in the Author Guidelines is set up for drawing chemical structures in the correct dimensions and font sizes. Chemical formulae should be numbered consecutively. For representation of chemical formulae, see recommendations published by IUPAC in J. Brecher, Pure Appl. Chem. 2008, 80, 277. Abbreviations such as Me, iPr, nBu, and Ph should be applied consistently. General substituents should be indicated by R, R′ or R1, R2 (not R1, R2 which means 1R and 2R). The spatial arrangement of the substituents should be indicated by hatched lines and solid wedges.
When preparing mathematical equations in Microsoft Word, authors are encouraged to use MathType or MathType Lite, which provide all the basic functionality needed for editing Equation 3.0 objects within a Word document. Alternatively, authors may use the equation editor that is built into Office, which utilizes Office Math Markup Language (OMML). Please do not use any of Microsoft Word′s built-in drawing objects in equations (e.g., shapes, lines, or arrows).
A Scheme is a reaction scheme containing chemical structures in which a chemical transformation occurs or a reaction mechanism is shown. A reaction that is described without chemical structures but with chemical formulae is an Equation; these are numbered consecutively as [Eq. (x)] or Equation (x).
A Figure is a graph, crystal structure, photograph, illustration, spectrum, or similar (Wiley-VCH journals do not publish Charts). A collection of chemical structures (e.g., for demonstrating reaction scope) is considered a Figure, not a Table; if this is accompanied by a chemical reaction, it should be labeled as a Scheme. Each Figure and Scheme should have a legend. Microscopy images (optical, electron, or scanning probe) should always contain a legible scale bar.
Tables are edited in the text and should be set up using the Table tools in MS Word (rather than as graphical elements); they must have a brief title and should only be subdivided by three horizontal lines (head, body, and foot). Footnotes are denoted [a], [b], [c], etc.
Animated, multimedia applications, films, and so on are welcome and are published online at no cost to the author or reader. Please refer to such applications in the article itself where appropriate. These data can be uploaded with the rest of the Supporting Information. Please use suitable compression technology to avoid exceedingly large movie files (>20 MB) for the benefit of reviewer and reader access times. Please ensure that your movies are saved in a common format (e.g., MPEG, AVI, QuickTime, GIF) that can be played on at least two different computer platforms (out of Windows/MacOS/Linux). If you have problems uploading large files, please contact the Editorial Office.
3.4. Experimental Data
Detailed experimental requirements are accessible in the Appendix: Reporting Experimental Information and Data.
For Communications and Full Papers, a concise Experimental Section and/or Computational Methods section may be reported in the manuscript; further detailed experimental methods and full characterization data must be included in the Supporting Information, including spectra, chromatograms, and diffraction patterns. For Research Articles, the experimental section must be placed in the Supporting Information.
The Experimental Section should give sufficient detail to enable others to repeat and compare your work. In theoretical papers, technical details such as computational methods should likewise be confined to an appropriately named section. Equipment, complete with make and model number, and conditions used for the measurement of physical data should be described at the beginning of the Experimental Section. If practical, authors should use a systematic name (IUPAC or Chemical Abstracts) for each title compound in the Experimental Section. Do not use computer programs to generate elaborate systematic names or use long, multiline compound names; in such cases general descriptors, such as compound 2, dendrimer 3, or alcohol 4, should be used. When preparing your manuscript and the Supporting Information, please ensure that the compound numbers used in both documents match.
Physical data should be given in the following order: Rf=0.38 (CHCl3/MeOH 9:1); m.p./b.p. 20°C; [α]D20=−13.5 (c=0.2 in acetone); 1H NMR (200 MHz, [D8]THF): δ=7.64–7.48 (m, 6H; Ar-H), 1.33 (q, 3JH,H=8 Hz, 2H; CH2), 0.79 ppm (s, 3H; CH3); 13C NMR (75 MHz, CDCl3): δ=72.5 (CCH), 26.8 (s; CH3), 6.5 ppm (d, 1JC,P=156.9 Hz; CHP); IR (Nujol): ν˜=1780 (vs), 1790 (s) cm−1 (C=O); UV/Vis (n-hexane): λmax (ε)=320 (5000), 270 nm (12000 mol−1dm75px−1); fluorescence (CH2Cl2): λex=435.5 nm; λem=659, 726 nm; MS (70 eV): m/z (%): 108 (20) [M]+[TR ion], 107 (60) [M−H]+, 91 (100) [C7H7]+; HRMS (ESI): m/z calcd for C32H47NO5+Na+: 548.3352 [M+Na]+; found: 548.3331; elemental analysis calcd (%) for C20H32N2O5: C 63.14, H 8.48, N 7.36; found: C 62.88, H 8.41, N 7.44.
3.5. Reference Section
In the list of references, the names of all authors should be given in upper- and lowercase, starting with the initials of first names followed by the surname. The penultimate and last names should be separated by a comma (not by "and"). Please double-check your references to ensure online links are correct; for example, by using CrossRef. For optimal presentation of your references, please:
1)use an up-to-date version of your reference management software (e.g., Endnote X9); 2)use up-to-date import filters to import downloaded citations into your reference library (e.g., see the Endnote downloads page); 3)use the Angewandte Chemie output style, which is shared by Angewandte Chemie, Chemistry Europe, and ACES journals; 4)correct errors in your reference list, such as missing article numbers or incorrectly formatted references.
A summary of the formatting style for references is provided below.
Journal citations: Journal titles should be abbreviated in accordance with the "Chemical Abstracts Service Source Index" (CASSI; no commas appear in the journal names). Examples: H. Frey, Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 1998, 37, 2193; Angew. Chem. 1998, 110, 2313; A. Kraft, Chem. Commun. 1996, 77, and references therein; Sci. Am. 1984, 250(4), 7; B. Krebs, H. U. Hürter, Acta Crystallogr. Sect. A 1981, 37, 163; G. Eulenberger, Z. Naturforsch. B 1981, 36, 521; D. Bruss, Appl. Phys. B, DOI: 10.1007/s003409900185.
Preprint citations: S. McKechnie, J. M. Frost, D. Pashov, P. Azarhoosh, A. Walsh, M. Schilfgaarde, 2017, arXiv preprint arXiv:1711.00533 [cond-mat.mtrl-sci].
N. Duchemin, R. Buccafusca, M. Daumas, V. Ferey, S. Arseniyadis, 2019, DOI 10.26434/chemrxiv.8091314.v1.
Data citations: [dataset] Authors; Year; Dataset title; Data repository or archive; Version (if any); Persistent identifier (e.g. DOI).
Book citations: Books without editor: E. Wingender, Gene Regulation in Eukaryotes, VCH, Weinheim, 1993, p. 215. Books with editor: T. D. Tullius in Comprehensive Supramolecular Chemistry, Vol. 5 (Eds.: J. L. Atwood, J. E. D. Davies, D. D. MacNicol, F. Vögtle, K. S. Suslick), Pergamon, Oxford, 1996, pp. 317–343.
Patents: C. R. A. Botta (Bayer AG), DE-B 2235093, 1973 (in cases where the patent is not available online at the respective patent office the corresponding reference to Chemical Abstracts should be added).
Thesis: A. Student, PhD thesis, University of Newcastle (UK), 1991.
Book volumes: G. Maas, Methoden Org. Chem. (Houben-Weyl) 4th ed. 1952–, Vol. E 21/1, 1983, pp. 379–397. "Synthesis in Biochemistry": R. Robinson, J. Chem. Soc. 1936, 1079.
Internet sources: S. Novick, "Biography of Rotational Spectra for Weakly Bound Complexes", can be found under http://www.wesleyan.edu/chem/faculty/novick/vdw.html, 2005.
Programs: G. M. Sheldrick, SHELXS-96, Program for the Solution of Crystal Structures, University of Göttingen, Göttingen (Germany), 1996.
3.6. Basic Keyword List
An interjournal browsing facility (automatic links to lists of thematically related contributions with a click of the mouse) has been developed for the readers of the journal family. Refer to the common keyword catalogue in American English. At least two of the maximum of five keywords assigned to an article should come from this list, to enhance the discoverability of your content in Special Collections.
This keyword list is a "living" catalogue, which is flexible enough to absorb new developments in chemistry. We therefore welcome all suggestions from our readers and authors that might improve its user-friendliness.
4. Accepted Manuscripts
4.1. Workflow
To facilitate rapid dissemination to the scientific community, authors are given the option to publish an "Accepted Article" immediately after their paper has been accepted, and prior to the editing and proofing process. Accepted Articles can be cited using the Digital Object Identifier (DOI). The final text version of the Accepted Article, which contains graphics, must be uploaded as a single PDF file. The file will appear automatically in the Accepted Article section of the journal′s homepage, and is thus the responsibility of the author. If applicable, the Supporting Information must also be submitted as a PDF file under "Supporting Information for Accepted Article". If the manuscript file is submitted under the incorrect file item, it will not be published online. Please note: authors are responsible for the content of an Accepted Article. Any changes to the published Accepted Article will be made only through the editing and proofing process. The cover page for the Accepted Article is assembled from the data entered into Editorial Manager; please ensure that the manuscript title, abstract, author names, and the order of the author names and affiliations are correct at the point of submission.
Further instructions for preparation of the edited and proofread Version of Record are provided in a separate e-mail to the author after acceptance of a manuscript. After copy-editing the correspondence author will receive galley proofs via Editorial Manager; these should be returned to the editorial office as soon as possible. The Version of Record will be published online in Early View as soon as possible after editing and proofing, and may be different to the Accepted Article. Readers should therefore obtain the Version of Record from the journal website to ensure accuracy of information.
Where a correction is required to the Version of Record after publication, authors should submit a Corrigendum (see Section 2). Please contact the Editorial Office in such cases.
In cases where authors wish to change their name following publication, the journal will update and republish the paper and redeliver the updated metadata to indexing services. Our editorial and production teams will use discretion in recognizing that name changes may be of a sensitive and private nature for various reasons, including (but not limited to) alignment with gender identity, or as a result of marriage, divorce, or religious conversion. Accordingly, to protect the author´s privacy, the journal will not publish a correction notice to the paper, and we will not notify co-authors of the change. Authors should contact the journal´s Editorial Office with their name change request.
4.2. Open Access
Angewandte Chemie, Chemistry Europe, and ACES journals support Open Access publishing, whereby authors can make their publications freely available the moment that they are published.
With Green Open Access, authors may self-archive non-final versions of an article on an online repository or personal/institutional website. Submitted versions of articles may be archived immediately (e.g., on a preprint server), and accepted versions after an embargo period. With Gold Open Access, the author pays an Article Publication Charge and the article is immediately freely available online for all to read, download, and share.
Your funder or institution may require you to publish Gold or Green Open Access, and they may be willing to pay the Article Publication Charge for you. Please explore the Open Access policies of your funder or institution.
Journals are ready to comply with the stipulations of research funding agencies to make manuscripts freely available online in the unedited and not proof-read form after acceptance. In general, we recommend that authors provide a link to their publication on their homepage through the "Digital Object Identifier" (DOI).
Further information on Open Access publishing is provided on the journal homepage under the "Contribute" tab.
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