Dr.Jihyun Park,
Editor,
NUCLEAR ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY
ISSN / eISSN 1738-5733
Publisher KOREAN NUCLEAR SOC, NUTOPIA BLDG, 342-1 JANGDAE-DONG, DAEJEON, SOUTH KOREA, 305-308
Email:[email protected]
OUR APC FEES USD $ 3000
JOURNAL TEMPLATE FORMAT
Manuscript preparation
A. General
The manuscript should be double-spaced throughout with 1″ wide margins. Number pages consecutively (with the title page as page 1). Begin a new page for reference lists, tables, and figure legends. The file should use the wrap-around end-of-line feature, i.e., returns at the end of paragraphs only. The paper should be concise, economical of references, figures and tables, and formatted as described below. Reports of investigative studies should be organized as follows, within the stated word limits: Title page, Abstract, Introduction, Aims, Material and methods, Results, Discussion, Conflict of interest, Acknowledgments, References, Tables, Figure legends, Supplementary material. Manuscripts that do not conform to these specifications will be returned to the authors for correction prior to review.
B. Word limits
Word limits will be instituted for all manuscripts accepted after January 1, 2024.
• Original articles should not exceed 3,500 words and 6 figures or tables.
• Letters to the Editor should not exceed 1,000 words, 2 figures or tables, and 15 references.
• Word counts include text only; the abstract, references, figure legends, tables, and supplemental data are excluded.
• There may be exceptions, which will be handled at the discretion of the Editor.
• Submissions that do not comply with these guidelines will be returned to authors for revision.
C. Title
The title page should include the following:
• Brief, informative title (brand names may not be used in the title)
• Full names of the author(s), together with academic titles, the address of the academic institution they are members of, and the academic title and full name of the head of that institution
• The name of the department, hospital or laboratory in which the study was conducted, and the name of the department to which the work should be attributed
• Corresponding author’s address, telephone, fax and email (email address required)
• 3–6 key words in English.
• Count of words of paper, numbers of tables and figures.
D. Abstract
Abstracts of original papers should be 200–250 words long and consist of 5 distinct parts, i.e. the introduction; aims; materials and methods; results; and conclusions. Abstracts of review papers should be 100–150 words long. Brand names may not be used in the abstract.
E. Material and methods
Readers should be able to reproduce the experiments from the information in the methods section, figure legends, table footnotes, and references. Provide the manufacturer’s name and location for materials purchased. This would normally include access to the identity (chemical formula) and doses of all reagents employed.
When reporting experiments on human subjects, authors should indicate whether the procedures followed were in accordance with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2000 (concerning the ethical principles for the medical community and forbidding releasing the name of the patient, initials or the hospital evidence number) and with the ethical standards of the responsible committee on human experimentation (institutional and national). Information regarding the ethical committee approval for conducting the research and the informed consent of patients for participating in the studies should be included in the methods section of those articles, in which the diagnostic intervention or the treatment result from non-routine procedures. The authors presenting case studies are obligated not to disclose patients’ personal data. Regarding photographs, in case of any doubt whether the picture inadequately protects the patient’s anonymity his consent is required for publication. Articles describing animal studies should contain information of being in accordance with local regulations (institutional and national).
F. Results and Discussion
Results briefly present the experimental data in text, tables or figures (for details, see items J and K below). The Discussion should focus on the interpretation and significance of the findings with concise objective comments that describe their relation to other work in the area. Do not repeat information in Results. Results and Discussion may be presented separately or combined into a single section.
Results should be presented as running text (sentences), tables or figures; only the most important conclusions must be stated. The results of laboratory studies and the relevant standards and standard deviations should be expressed using SI units.
G. Conflict of interest
Conflict of interest. Authors are expected to describe sources of the research funding, a role of the potential sponsor in planning, executing and analysis in the study, and the influence (bias) the funding organization had on the content of the article. Other relationships (such as employment, consultancies, stock ownership, honoraria, paid expert testimony) providing potential sources of conflict of interest in relation to the submitted article should also be revealed.
H. Acknowledgments
A note of acknowledgment is appropriate recognition for contributors who may not be listed as authors.
I. References
References in the order in which they appear in the body text. The references in the body text should be numbered consecutively in the order in which they are cited; the numbers should be given in square brackets ([ ]). The list of references at the end of the article should indicate the authors’ surnames and initials (if there are more than four authors, the names of the first three are to be given, followed by et al.), title of the paper, abbreviated journal title (as per Index Medicus), year of publication, volume number and pages. Book chapters and monographs should be identified using the author’s surname and initial, title of the chapter, title of the book, the surname(s) and initial(s) of the editor(s) of the volume, name of the publisher, place of publication, year, volume and pages.
SCOPES,
Its a multi -disciplinary journal
Topics
- Physics
- Computer Science
- Renewable energy
- Modern technology
- Nanotechnology
- Optical electronics
- Nuclear energy
- Electronic circuits
- Materials and energy
- Software and integrated circuits
- Computer engineering
- Mathematics
- Engineering
- Civil Engineering
- Medicine
- Nuclear
- Chemistry
- Biology
- Metreology
- Agriculture