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期刊名称:PROCEEDINGS OF THE INSTITUTION OF CIVIL ENGINEERS-WATER AND MARITIME ENGINEERING

ISSN:1472-4561
版本:SCI-CDE
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:THOMAS TELFORD SERVICES LTD, THOMAS TELFORD HOUSE,1 HERON QUAY, LONDON, ENGLAND, E14 4JD
  出版社网址:http://www.thomastelford.com/journals/
期刊网址:http://www.thomastelford.com/journals/JournalContentPage.asp?JournalTitle=Proceedings+of+ICE%2C+Water+Management&JournalID=16&JournalMenu=true&OriginalTitle=Water+Management&homepage=True
影响因子:
主题范畴:WATER RESOURCES;    ENERGY & FUELS;    ENGINEERING, CIVIL;    ENGINEERING, OCEAN;    

期刊简介(About the journal)    投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)    编辑部信息(Editorial Board)   



About the journal

 Proceedings of ICE, Water Management

Water Management covers all aspects of water and wastewater treatment, water supply, river, wetland and catchment management, inland waterways and urban regeneration.

Water Management publishes authoritative, stimulating and perceptive papers of use to practitioners (including consultants, contractors, managers and planners) and applied researchers. Articles published include the traditional areas of applied fluid mechanics and water (including supply, treatment and sewerage) and river engineering. Together with the increasingly important fields of wetland and catchment management, groundwater and contaminated land, waterfront development and urban regeneration. The scope also includes hydroinformatics tools, risk and uncertainty methods, and environmental, social and economic issues relating to sustainable.

 

 

 

 
Instructions to Authors

 

The ICE's journals provide an unparalleled forum for disseminating your achievements-or those of your organisation-in any field of civil engineering, whether you are in design, construction, research or academia. Here are some of the benefits of publishing with us:

Profile - our journals are sold in large numbers all over the world and are subscribed to by most of the major international engineering libraries. We will ensure that your work reaches the widest possible audience in print and on-line, through creative promotion and marketing, and through our constantly developing electronic initiatives.

Quality - our journals' reputation for quality is unsurpassed ensuring that the originality, authority and accuracy of you work will be fully recognised. Our refereeing procedures are fair and open, with the usual aim of helping authors develop and improve their work. We have been producing journals for over 160 years; this accumulated knowledge has resulted in journals of the highest quality.

Author services - we provide a rapid response service to all our authors, with dedicated support staff for each journal, and a point of contact throughout the refereeing and production processes. Our aim, to ensure that the production process is as smooth as possible, is borne out by the high number of authors who publish with us again and again.

The Institution of Civil Engineers publishes seven principal journals: Géotechnique and the six parts of the Proceedings.

Proceedings - Civil Engineering
www.ice.org.uk
Civil Engineering is the general part of the ICE Proceedings, and is distributed free to all (except retired and student) members of the Institution in the EU. Members based overseas receive the material published in Civil Engineering as part of the monthly magazine, New Civil Engineer International. With paid subscriptions from international libraries, universities and nonmembers, the journal's total circulation is around 60000. The journal comprises refereed papers and single page 'Briefing' articles which have a fundamental message for all civil engineers regardless of their activity or location. It reports on developments across the broad spectrum of civil engineering - ranging from small but innovative schemes to international landmark projects, and from technological advances and regulatory changes to topical management and professional issues. Special Issues of Civil Engineering are published each year to cover various aspects of a particularly large project or significant topic. These are distributed to members and non members world-wide on a subscription basis.

Proceedings - Structures and Buildings
www.structuresandbuildings.com
Structures and Buildings covers the research, planning, design, construction, maintenance and operation of civil engineering structures and buildings, with particular emphasis on bridges. It contains refereed papers and technical notes on topics ranging from the design, strength, durability and behaviour of structural components and systems through to M&E services, cladding, refurbishment, maintenance, energy conservation and the movement of people within and around buildings.

Proceedings - Municipal Engineer
www.municipalengineer.com
Municipal Engineer focuses on the research, planning, design, construction, operation and maintenance of community engineering facilities, projects and services. It contains refereed papers and technical notes covering all types of municipal engineering works in addition to public-sector management issues such as competitive tendering, contracting administration, law and finance.

Proceedings - Water and Maritime Engineering
www.waterandmaritime.com
As well as forming part of the ICE's Proceedings, Water and Maritime Engineering is an official journal of the International Association for Hydraulic Engineering and Research. The journal focuses on civil engineering projects across both the water and maritime fields. International in coverage, subjects are practical in nature and range from water supply and treatment, to the analysis of river, coastal and offshore engineering.

Proceedings - Transport
www.transport-ice.com
Transport focuses on the research, planning, design, construction, maintenance and operation of all types of transport systems and infrastructure - including airports, railways, highways, bridges and pipelines. It contains refereed papers and technical notes on topics ranging from transport policy and traffic management technology to the maintenance and performance of structural materials and the management, environmental and economic aspects of urban and inter-urban transportation systems.

Proceedings - Geotechnical Engineering
www.geotechnicaljournal.com
Geotechnical Engineering provides practical information for civil, structural and geotechnical engineers, ranging from state-of-the- art reports to discussions of current design methodologies and case records. Subjects covered include: tunnelling, foundations, retaining walls, embankments, diaphragm walls, piling, subsidence, soil mechanics and geoenvironmental engineering.

Géotechnique
www.geotechniqueice.com
Géotechnique is the world's leading learned geotechnical journal, publishing entirely original papers and technical notes on soil and rock mechanics, engineering geology and environmental geotechnics. Topics covered range from applied, experimental or theoretical research to novel design and construction methods and case histories of site performance observations both during and after construction.

General information
Before setting out to write a paper, please have a look at a recent issue of the journal you are intending to submit to as its contents represent the current editorial standard. If the paper that you are intending to write is fundamentally different from the type of papers shown, it may still be of interest to the editorial panel but it is worth checking with the panel secretary first to ensure that your time and energy is not misspent. Please do not try to recreate the look or style of the journal as it appears in print. Papers that are accepted for publication will go through many processes before they are finally published. Any original formatting will not be retained and, if anything, hinders production. Most importantly, please ensure that the electronic copy sent in when the paper has finally been accepted is the final version of the paper, complete with any of the referee's amendments.

Table 1: Journal sizes and frequency

CE SB TR WME ME GT GE
Issues/year 6 4 4 4 4 4 10
Distribution 60,000 2500 2500 2500 2500 2000 2000
Pages/issue 48 128 64 96 64 64 96
Size A4 A4 A4 A4 A4 A4 A4

Key: CE= Civil Engineering; SB = Structures and Buildings; TR = Transport; WME = Water and Maritime Engineering; ME = Municipal Engineer; GT = Geotechnical Engineering; GE = Geotechnique; OPJ (Table 2 below) = Other Proceedings Journals

Table 2: Journal content
(preferred maximum word lengths)

CE OPJ GE
Refereed papers 2000 3500 5000
Refereed technical notes n/a 2000 2000
Discussion contributions 500 500 500
Non-refereed articles 800 1000 n/a
Book reviews 500 500 500

Authors are encouraged to submit a 100-200 words synopsis for approval before submitting a paper, technical note or article to avoid duplication and wasted effort.

Electronic submissions
Electronic submissions are preferred, as they speed up both the review and production process. Submissions should be sent by email or on PC compatible disk or CD. The text, captions and tables should be in Microsoft Word or rtf files and figures should be in separate .jpg, .tif, .eps, Excel or Word files as appropriate (see section on figures for specific details). File names must contain all or part of the lead author's surname and indicate what it contains (e.g. smithtext.doc, smithfig2.jpg).

Hard copy submissions
If authors are unable to submit electronically, four printed copies of the submission must be supplied (one original and three duplicate copies). Each copy should comprise text, references, tables, illustrations and captions in separate sections. The text must comprise consecutively numbered pages and use double-line spacing and wide margins.

Text
The text should be as short and concise as possible, excluding anything that is not directly relevant to the subject matter but including any associated safety, environmental or ethical issues. The text should be in English and should be readily understood by practicing engineers. All statements and references should be correct and accurate. Speculative material must be clearly identified as such. The text should be in the third person and should avoid colloquialisms - texts originally prepared for oral presentation therefore will usually need to be rewritten. The text should not refer to the names of individuals, organisations, products or services unless it is essential to understanding and then should only appear once. Text must be neither gratuitously complimentary nor in any way derogatory about any person or organisation. Principal participants in a project should be listed separately from the text in a table or acknowledgement.

Spelling should follow the first spelling in the latest edition of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary, however 's' spellings rather than 'z' spellings are preferred (e.g. specialise). Capital letters should only be used at the beginning of proper nouns and acronyms and abbreviations should be avoided. Symbols should be in accordance with latest edition of the relevant industry guidelines.

Page 1 should comprise the following information:
  • date written/revised
  • title of paper (maximum eight words)
  • full names and qualification of authors
  • positions/affiliations of authors
  • contact address and telephone, fax numbers and e-mail addresses of all authors
  • number of words
  • number of tables and figures

Page 2 should start with:

  • a synopsis of 100-200 words which summarises the topic and conclusions as fully as possible - this is vital for on-line searching

Mathematical equations should only be used where absolutely necessary and should be clear and easily understood by engineers. Each equation should be numbered and appear on a separate line in the text. A list of notation defining all symbols used should be provided at the start of the paper. Only relevant equations should be shown in the main body of the text - any development of an equation should appear, if essential, in an appendix.

SI units should be used throughout, even for descriptions of historic projects using imperial or other units.

Tables
Information which is additional yet essential to the understanding of the text - and which cannot be better presented graphically - should be supplied as tables on separate pages. Tables should be simple with brief column headlines (including all units) and as few rows and columns as possible. Each table should be numbered consecutively and referred to in the text (e.g. Table 1). Each table should have a caption (e.g. Table 3 Material properties).

References
Any information, work or ideas from other sources used or referred to must be properly acknowledged in a list of references.

Books: Author's surname, initials, title of book, publisher, place of publication, year, eg Wearne S. Principles of Engineering Organisations (3rd edn). Thomas Telford, London, 2000.

Perodicals: Author's surname, initials, title of article, title of periodical, year, volume, month or part, first to last page number, eg Gibbons C., Experimental behaviour of partially restrained steel columns. Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers-Structures and Buildings, 2001, 146, No.1, 29-42.

Conference proceedings: Author's surname, initials, title of paper, title of conference proceedings, place of conference, year, first to last page number, eg Bishop A.W. Factors controlling the strength of partially saturated soils. Proceedings of the Residential Conference on the Shear Strength of Soils, Colorado, 1960, pp.503-532.

In Proceedings, all references should be indicated in the text with consecutive superscript numbers in the text where appropriate (e.g. Smith,1). The numbered references should then be listed at the end of the text in numerical order.

References in Géotechnique should be indicated in the text by the authors' names with the year of publication in brackets (e.g. Smith (2001)). Details of references should be given in an unnumbered list in alphabetical order of authors' names at the end of the paper.

Figures
Line drawings and photographs should be included wherever possible to enhance the understanding of the text. As a rough guide, there should be one or two figures (or tables) per 500 words. Figures must be suitable for reproduction in black and white, and must be saved separately from the text as a separate file (see the separate sections on photographs and drawings below for preferred file formats). Where hard copies are supplied, each figure must be marked with the author's name, and must be no larger than A4 in size. Figures must be numbered consecutively and referred to in the text (e.g. Fig. 1). A list of captions for all figures should be supplied on a separate page. Detailed maps, CAD drawings and large charts do not reproduce well in print, and will not normally be accepted.

Photographs: Photographs must be of good quality with sharp focus and clear definition. For electronic submission, photographs must be supplied as .jpg, .tif or .eps format. No other format can be accepted. The file name must include all or part of the author surname and the figure number (e.g. smithfig1.jpg). To be suitable for reproduction, the width of the image should be at least 1500 pixels or 'dots', for which you will need to scan a 125 mm wide photographic print at a resolution of at least 300 dots per inch (dpi) or use a a 2 mega-pixel digital camera.

For hard copy submission, the original photographs should be on glossy photographic paper at least 125 mm x 100 mm in size or on transparency. Inkjet and laser prints and photographs taken directly from brochures, books, magazines or journals are not acceptable as originals. Three duplicates of each photograph should be provided for referees but can be in the form of photocopies. The originals and duplicates should each be clearly marked with the lead author surname and figure number. Originals should be sent in stiff packaging and individually protected from marking and scratching. They will not normally be returned if the submission is accepted, but can be returned if requested. The correct orientation must also be indicated if there is any possibility of misunderstanding. Slides are acceptable, however figure details and the paper title must be included on the side of the frame.

Drawings: Drawings and charts should be sufficiently clear and simple to enable them to be used at a width of 175 mm without any loss of detail. As such, working drawings and plans are generally too detailed and need to be simplified. For electronic submission, line drawings can be supplied as Microsoft Word, Excel, .tif or .eps files. No other format (such as .bmp) can be accepted. The file name must include all or part of the lead author's surname and the figure number (e.g. smithfig2.tif). To enable reduction, drawings should be supplied both with and without annotations. All location plans must include a north point and a scale and all numerical values must include units.

Non-members of the Institution should acknowledge that they have read and accept the provisions of ICE by-law 115, which grants the Institution a licence to submitted material. ICE members are bound by this by-law as a condition of membership. It is the corresponding author's responsibility to obtain agreement to these terms from all coauthors, and to obtain the permission of all relevant parties for publication of the information contained in their submission, including all illustrations. Written assurance will be sought from submitting authors prior to acceptance of their paper.

Submissions should be sent to: (Name of journal),
The Institution of Civil Engineers,
1-7 Great George Street,
London SW1P 3AA,
UK
Tel: +44 (0) 20 7222 7722,
Fax: +44 (0) 20 7799 1325,
E-mail: journals@ice.org.uk

Before submitting a paper, technical note or article, authors may send in a 100-200 word synopsis to ensure that the proposed subject matter does not conflict with other papers in preparation but not yet published. A covering letter should be sent with every submission indicating the journal for which it is intended, though the ICE retains the right to publish the submission in the journal it considers most appropriate after consultation with the author. If the submission has been submitted or published elsewhere, the authors must provide full details.

All material submitted to ICE journals is approved before publication via the relevant journal's Editorial Panel on behalf of the Council of the Institution. All papers and technical notes are refereed, usually by two referees chosen by the Panel. Referees are generally required to complete a report form within four weeks. This includes a recommendation of which ICE journal the paper or technical note should be published in. In most cases authors are requested to make a revision, which may be returned to the referees for reassessment. The minimum time taken for a submission to be accepted or rejected by a panel is therefore about two months, though five months is the average.

Rejected submissions are returned to the author as soon as possible and the Institution relinquishes its license to publish.

Accepted submissions are passed for publication to the ICE's publishing company, Thomas Telford Ltd. At this stage authors are asked to provide a final electronic copy of the text, which incorporates all the amendments made during the refereeing process, and is exactly the same as the finally accepted submission.

When a paper has been accepted, Production Editors at Thomas Telford check submissions for consistency, house style and grammar. Papers are copy edited as appropriate by technical editors, and sent for typesetting. Typeset page proofs are then sent to authors for checking prior to the paper going to press-authors will usually receive proofs (either on paper or by e-mail) six weeks after a paper has been accepted. Only corrections to errors in typesetting can be accepted at this stage, although last-minute amendments or updates can be made, where the change is absolutely essential.

At the author proof stage, authors also get the opportunity to order extra copies of their printed paper for distribution amongst colleagues. 25 copies are provided free of charge.

At minimum, publication will be around three months after final acceptance-making a total of about six to nine months after submission.

All papers in Proceedings and Géotechnique are considered for an award in the year following publication. Further details can be obtained from the Senior Journals Secretary at the Institution.

Papers appear on the journal's web site up to three weeks prior to publication of the print edition. There are several ways to add information to the paper for inclusion on the online version only. Acceptable information includes:
  • Biographical details-up to 1000 words on lead and co-authors, including affiliations and lists of previously published work.
  • Links-internet links to an author's organisation, or other relevant WWW or FTP sites.
  • Experimental data-where plots or analyses of recorded data are included in the paper, this can be extended and supplied in spreadsheet form (Microsoft Excel spreadsheets only) or as text files.
For the Proceedings, all supplementary electronic data must be supplied within three weeks of a paper's acceptance. For Géotechnique, it must be supplied at the same time as the original submission, as it is assessed by the Panel as a part of the normal submission procedure (this is not the case for Proceedings).

Authors are free to update or amend the data or links at any time, particularly to draw attention to new information, research or discussion.

All papers, technical notes and articles published in Proceedings and Géotechnique can also be the subject of written discussion in subsequent issues. The closing date for written discussion is normally six months after the publication date. Each discussion contribution should be no more than 500 words in length and should be prepared in accordance with these guidelines.

Discussion contributions for Civil Engineering appear on-line only. Informal discussion contributions on papers appearing in Géotechnique may be made on the journal's discussion forum, geotechnique-interactive. See the journal's web site for further details.

Keywords for Géotechnique
A - Anchors, Anisotropy
B - Basements, Bearing capacity, Buried structures
C - Calcareous soils, Case history, Centrifuge modelling, Chalk, Chemical properties, Clays, Coastal engineering, Collapsed settlement, Compaction, Compressibility, Consolidation, Constitutive relations, Contaminated material, Creep, Cut-off walls and barriers
D - Dams, Deformation, Design, Dewatering, Diaphragm and in situ walls, Drainage, Dredging, Dynamics
E - Earthfill, Earth pressure, Earthquakes, Elasticity, Electrokinetics, Embankments, Environmental engineering, Erosion, Excavation, Expansive soils
F - Fabric/structure of soils, Failure, Field instrumentation, Filters, Footings/foundations, Fractals, Friction, Full-scale tests
G - Geology, Geomorphology, Geophysics, Geotextiles, Geosynthetics, Glacial soils, Gravels, Ground freezing, Ground improvement, Ground movements, Groundwater, Grouting
H - Historical review
I - Industrial wastes, In-situ testing
L - Laboratory equipment, Laboratory tests, Landfills, Landslides, Limit equilibrium methods, Limit state design/analysis, Liquefaction
M - Microscopy, Mineralogy, Mining, Model tests, Monitoring
N - Numerical modelling, Neural networks
O - Offshore engineering, Organic soils
P - Partial saturation, Particle crushing/crushability, Pavements and roads, Permeability, Piles, Pipejacking, Plasticity, Pollution migration/control, Pore pressures
R - Rafts, Radioactive waste disposal, Reclamation, Reinforced soils, Remediation, Repeated loading, Residual soils, Retaining walls, Rocks/rock mechanics
S - Sampling; Sands; Sedimentation; Seepage; Seismicity; Settlement; Shear strength; Sheet piles and cofferdams; Silos; Silts; Site investigation; Slopes; Snow ice and frost; Soft rocks; Soil classification; Soil nailing; Soil stabilization; Soil/structure interaction; Standards; Statistical analysis; Stiffness; Strain localisation; Stress analysis; Stress path; Suction
T- Temperature effects, Theoretical analysis, Time dependence, Torsion, Trenches, Tunnels
V - Vegetation, Vibration
W - Water flow, Waves and wave loading

Keywords for Proceedings
A - Airports, Anchors & anchorages
B - Beams & girders, Biography, Bitumen & tar, Book reviews, Brickwork & masonry, Bridges, Buildings structure & design
C - Cables & tendons, Car parks, Coastal engineering, Codes of practice & standards, Cofferdams & caissons, Columns, Communications & control systems, Composite structures, Concrete technology & manufacture, Concrete structures, Conservation, Contracting, Contracts, law & arbitration, Cooling towers, Corrosion, Cranes conveyors & material handling
D - Demolition, Design methods & aids, Developing countries, Diaphragm walls, Disaster engineering, District heating, Drainage & irrigation, Dredging, Drilling & drillholes, Dynamics
E - Economics & finance, Education & training, Electrical engineering & distribution, Embankments, Environment, European Union (EU), Excavation
F - Failures, Fatigue Field testing & monitoring, Floods & floodworks, Foundations
G - Geology, Geotechnical engineering, Geotextiles membranes & geogrids, Grouting, Groundwater
H - Health & safety, History, Hydraulics & hydrodynamics, Hydrology & water resource
I - Information technology, Infrastructure planning
L - Landfill, Land reclamation, Land surveying, Lecture, Liability, Local government
M - Maintenance & inspection, Management, Marinas, Maritime engineering, Marketing and public relations, Materials technology, Mathematical modelling, Mechanical engineering, Military engineering, Mining & quarrying, Models (physical), Municipal & public service engineering
N - Noise
O - Offshore engineering
P - Pavement design, Piles & piling, Pipes & pipelines, Planning and scheduling, Pollution, Pods docks & harbours, Power stations (fossil fuel), Power stations (non-fossil), Public health
Q - Quality control
R - Rail & bus stations, Rail track design Railway systems, Recreational facilities, Recycling of materials, Rehabilitation reclamation & renovation, Research & development, Resins & plastics, Retaining walls, Reviews, Risk & probability analysis, River engineering, Roads & highways, Rock mechanics
S - Safety & hazards, Sea defences, Seismic engineering, Sewers & drains, Sewage treatment & disposal, Shells, Silos, Site investigation, Slabs & plates, Social impact, Statistical analysis, Steel structures, Street lighting, Strength and testing of materials, Stress analysis, Structural frameworks, Subsidence
T - Temporary works, Tendering, Thermal effects, Timber structures, Town and city planning, Traffic engineering, Transport management, Transport planning, Tunnels & tunnelling
U - Underwater engineering, Urban regeneration
W - Waste management & disposal, Water supply, Waterways & canals, Weather, Wind loading & aerodynamics

For submission and refereeing:

THE INSTITUTION OF CIVIL ENGINEERS
1-7 Great George Street, London SW1P 3AA, UK
Tel: +44 (0) 20 7222 7722
Fax: +44 (0) 20 7222 7500
E-mail: journals@ice.org.uk
Website: www.ice.org.uk

For submission and refereeing, production and publication:

THOMAS TELFORD LIMITED
1 Heron Quay, London E14 4JD, UK
Tel: +44 (0) 20 7987 6999
Fax: +44 (0) 20 7538 9620
E-mail: journals@thomastelford.com
Website: www.thomastelford.com/jol


Editorial Board

 

Chairman
Professor R A Falconer DSc(Eng), FREng, FICE
University of Wales, Cardiff, UK

Members
  • Professor D J Balmforth PhD, CEng, FICE
    Montgomery Watson, Wakefield, UK
  • Professor I Cluckie MSc, CEng, FICE
    University of Bristol, UK
  • A Eadon BSc, CEng, MICE
    Haswell Consulting Engineers, Birmingham, UK 
  • Professor D A Ervine BSc, CEng, MICE, MCIWEM
    University of Glasgow, UK
  • Dr I Guymer PhD, DIS, CEng, MCIWEM
    University of Sheffield, UK
  • Dr E Harris PhD, CEng, MICE, MCIWEM
    Environment Agency, Wales
  • D MacDonald MSc, MCIWEM
    Black & Veatch Consulting Ltd, London, UK
  • Professor D Savic PhD, MSc, CEng, MCIWEM
    University of Exeter, UK
  • Professor R H J Sellin CEng, FICE
    University of Bristol, UK 
  • Professor G Thompson BSc, CEng,  MICE
    Black and Veatch Consulting Ltd, Surrey, UK
  • D Webb MSc, CEng, MICE, MCIWEM
    Halcrow Group Ltd, Swindon, UK
  • W R White PhD, CEng, FICE, FCIWEM
    HR Wallingford Ltd, Oxford, UK

Corresponding members

  • E Costa Teixeira PhD
    Universidade Federal do Espirito Santo, Vitoria, Brazil
  • Professor C James PhD, MS
    University of Witwatersrand, South Africa
  • M F Lambert PhD
    University of Adelaide, Australia
  • Professor S Liu MSc, FCWIA
    Tongji University, People's Republic of China
  • Professor A E Mynett
    Delft Hydraulics, Netherlands
  • M Namin PhD
    Water Research Centre, Iran
 
Editor (for general editorial enquiries):
Simon Fullalove,
Thomas Telford Ltd,
1 Heron Quay,
London E14 4JD,
Tel: +44 (0)20 7665 2448,
Fax: +44 (0)20 7538 9620

Secretary (for paper status enquiries):
Kathleen Hollow,
Institution of Civil Engineers,
1 Great George Street,
London SW1P 1AA, UK,
Tel: +44 (0)20 7665 2242,
Fax: +44 (0)20 7665 2294
 


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