期刊名称:JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN OIL CHEMISTS SOCIETY

ISSN:0003-021X
版本:SCI-CDE
出版频率:Monthly
出版社:WILEY, 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN, USA, NJ, 07030-5774
  出版社网址:http://www.springer.com/?SGWID=8-102-0-0-0
期刊网址:http://www.springer.com/chemistry/journal/11746
影响因子:1.849
主题范畴:CHEMISTRY, APPLIED;    FOOD SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY

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



About the journal

 Journal of the American Oil Chemists' Society

Aims and scope

JAOCS, an AOCS journal, publishes original research articles, invited reviews, and letters to the editor that add significantly to the body of knowledge concerning the science and technology of fats, oils, oilseed proteins, and related materials. Included are reports of advances, innovations or important new information pertaining to analysis, properties, processing, products, and applications of these food and industrial resources. Breakthroughs in food science and technology, biotechnology (including biocatalysis and bioprocessing), and industrial products and applications are particularly appropriate.

Publishing: original research papers, invited reviews and Letters to the Editor


Instructions to Authors
Instructions to authors
1 Legal requirements
The author(s) guarantee(s) that the manuscript
will not be published elsewhere in
any language without the consent of the
copyright owner, the American Oil Chemists?BR>Society; that the rights of third parties will not
be violated, and that neither the AOCS nor
the publisher will be held legally responsible
should there be any claims for compensation.
Authors wishing to include figures or
text passages that have already been
published elsewhere are required to obtain
permission from the copyright owner(s) and
to include evidence that such permission
has been granted when submitting their
papers. Any material received without such
evidence will be assumed to originate from
the authors. Manuscripts must be accompanied
by the ‘‘Copyright Transfer Statement.’’
The form can be obtained from
springer.com/journal/11746.
2 Open choice publication
In addition to the normal publication process
(whereby an article is submitted to the
journal and access to that article is granted
to customers who have purchased a subscription),
Springer now provides an alternative
publishing option: Springer Open
Choice. A Springer Open Choice article
receives all the benefits of a regular ‘subscription-
based?article, but in addition is
made available publicly through Springer’s
online platform SpringerLink. To publish via
Springer Open Choice, upon acceptance
please visit springer.com/openchoice to
complete the relevant order form and provide
the required payment information.
Payment must be received in full before
publication, or articles will be published as
regular subscription-model articles. We regret
that Springer Open Choice cannot be
ordered for published articles.
3 Editorial procedure
Papers must present scientific results that
are essentially new. They have to be written
in English using either American or British
spelling throughout. Authors who have
difficulty with English should obtain the
assistance of colleagues more proficient in
the language, e.g., in the English departments
of their universities, in writing their
manuscripts. All manuscripts are subject to
peer review.
Authors should submit their manuscripts to
the Editorial Office online to facilitate even
quicker and more efficient processing.
Electronic submission substantially reduces
the editorial processing and reviewing times
and shortens overall publication times.
Please log directly on to
http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/jaocs.
Upload your manuscript following the
on-screen instructions.
Support: If you face any problems while
submitting your manuscript, please
contact: Manuscript Central:
Support@ScholarOne.com
Manuscripts that are returned to the authors
for revision should be sent back within 6
weeks for minor and 3 months for major
revisions; otherwise they will be considered
withdrawn. Rejected manuscripts will not be
returned to the authors (except for original
illustrations).
Papers that do not conform to the journal
norms may be returned to the authors for
revision before being considered for publication.
The author is responsible for the accuracy
of the references.
4 Manuscript preparation
General Remarks
JAOCS publishes original research articles,
invited reviews, and letters to the editor that
add significantly to the body of knowledge
concerning the science and technology of
fats, oils, oilseed proteins, and related
materials. Included are reports of advances,
innovations, or important new information
pertaining to analysis, properties, processing,
products, and applications of these
food and industrial resources. Breakthroughs
in food science and technology,
biotechnology (including biocatalysis and
bioprocessing), and industrial products and
applications are particularly appropriate.
Letters to the editor provide brief reports of
significant new findings, new interpretations
of published data, or new features of
equipment, instrumentation, or techniques.
Because of their brevity, letters to the editor
can receive expedited review.
The manuscript must be identified with one
of the six subject areas on the manuscript
submission form as (1) Biotechnology and
Biocatalysis, (2) Nonfood or Industrial
Applications, (3) Analytical and Physical
Chemistry, (4) Processing and Engineering
Technology, (5) Food, Feed Science, and
Nutrition, or (6) Nutraceuticals and Functional
Foods. Failure to identify the manuscript
by one of the above-mentioned
subject areas will result in a delay in
processing.
Original research articles should normally
not exceed 10 printed pages including no
more than 8 figures, schemes and tables.
The number of references should not
exceed 15?0.
Letters to the Editors should not exceed 3
printed pages in length (800 words are
approximately equivalent to one printed
page).
All manuscripts are subject to copy editing.
Spectra. Submission of spectra as produced
by a computer running a spectrometer
or by a data station is encouraged.
Routine infrared, electronic, NMR, and
mass spectra of new compounds should be
numerically summarized, as appropriate, in
the Experimental Procedures section.
Acronyms such as GLC, HPLC, GC–MS,
in place of full spelling for instruments,
equipment, etc., may be used without
spelling the terms out because these are
generally recognized terms.
Chemical formulae and names as well as
the names of organisms must be unambiguous
and in accordance with the relevant
international recommendations, cf. "IUPAC
(1993) Quantities, Units and Symbols in
Physical Chemistry, 2nd edn., Blackwell
Scientific, Oxford" and "ISO (1993) International
Vocabulary of Basic and General
Terms in Metrology," Geneva. Trade names
should be avoided: abbreviations and uncommon
symbols should be explained at
first mention.
DNA sequences must be submitted to
GenBank (NCBI - National Center for
Biotechnology Information, Bethesda, USA)
or to the EMBL Nucleotide Sequence Data
Base (EBI - European Institute of Bioinformatics,
Cambridge, UK), and accession
numbers must be provided when the paper
is accepted.
When drugs are mentioned, the international
(generic) name should be used. The
proprietary name, chemical composition,
and manufacturer should be stated in full in
the Experimental Procedures section.
Genus and species names should be in
italics. The common names of animals
should not be capitalized.
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN OIL CHEMISTS?SOCIETY
123
Units and abbreviations. Please adhere to
internationally agreed standards such as
those adopted by the commission of the
International Union of Pure and Applied
Physics (IUPAP) or defined by the International
Organization of Standardization
(ISO). Metric SI units should be used
throughout except where non-SI units are
more common [e.g. liter (I) for volume].
Names of instruments and equipment,
and their manufacturers, no longer need to
be noted in the Experimental Procedures
section. However, sources of chemicals,
columns, packing materials, and the like
should be included, along with locations of
these suppliers.
Title Page
The title page should include:
?The name(s) of the author(s) (an asterisk
indicates the corresponding author)
?A concise and informative title (limited to
100 characters)
?The affiliation(s) and address(es) of the
author(s)
?The e-mail address, telephone, and fax
numbers of the corresponding author
Abstract
Maximal length of the abstract is 200 words;
no literature references should be contained
in the abstract. The abstract should briefly
state the objective and approach and give a
succinct summary of results and major
conclusions drawn. Emphasis should be on
what was found, not what was done. Letters
to the Editors should be preceded by a short
abstract (no more than 100 words).
Key words
Up to 10 key words that describe the
subject matter of their paper should be
supplied after the Abstract for indexing
purposes. Within the Online Submission
system authors are asked additionally to
select key words from a key word list.
These key words are not printed but used
only for matching reviewers from the
reviewer database.
Abbreviations should be defined at first
mention in the abstract and again in the
main body of the text and used consistently
thereafter (see also Scientific Style and
Format: The CBE Manual for Authors,
Editors and Publishers, 6th edn., Cambridge
University Press, Cambridge, UK,
1994). The formal name and EC number of
enzymes are used at first mention, and the
trivial name can be used subsequently, if
more convenient.
A list of symbols should follow the abstract
if such a list is needed. Symbols must be
written clearly. The international system of
units (SI units) should be used.
Essential footnotes to the text should be
numbered consecutively and placed at the
bottom of the page to which they refer.
The Introduction should state the purpose
of the investigation and give a short review
of the pertinent literature. It should be
limited to identifying the gap in scientific
knowledge or the problem that the research
addressed. No more than 8?0 references
should need to be cited.
Experimental Procedures. Sufficient detail
or literature references to such methods
should be included in the
Experimental Procedures section to permit
other scientists to repeat or extend the
experiments. This section should also
contain an overview of the experimental
approach used, especially in the case of
complex or unusual designs. Data should
not be reported to more significant figures
than justified by the experimental procedures
used.
Results & Discussion The Results and
Discussion section should describe and
analyze the outcomes of the study and
discuss how these outcomes correspond to
the gap or problem identified in the introduction.
Appropriate statistical analysis of
the results is required. Data should be
presented as concisely as possible, if
appropriate in the form of tables or figures,
although very large tables should be
avoided.
Conclusion The Conclusion section should
concisely describe the main contribution/
outcome of the results to the advancement
of the field; it should not simply summarize
each and every point of the study. The
Conclusion should also briefly denote
potential impact of the results; however,
it should not include statements related to
future planned research or publications.
One to two paragraphs, at the most, should
be sufficient for a good Conclusion section.
Acknowledgements. These should be as
brief as possible. Any grant that requires
acknowledgement should be mentioned.
The names of funding organizations should
be written in full.
Funding. Authors are expected to disclose
any commercial or other associations that
might pose a conflict of interest in connection
with submitted material. All funding
sources supporting the work and institutional
or corporate affiliations of the authors
should be acknowledged.
References. The list of references should
include only works that are cited in the text
and that have been published or accepted
for publication. ‘‘Personal communications’’
or ‘‘Unpublished data’’ should only be
mentioned in the text.
If available the Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
can be added at the end of the reference in
question. Example:
Ward J, Robinson PJ (2004) How to detect
hepatocellular carcinoma in cirrhosis. Eur
Radiol 14: 29?6. DOI 10.1007/s00330-
004-1450-y
A paper published online but not yet in print
can be cited using the DOI:
Ward J, Robinson PJ (2004) How to detect
hepatocellular carcinoma in cirrhosis. Eur
Radiol DOI 10.1007/s00330-004-1450-y
References should be numbered in the
order in which they appear in the text and
listed in numerical order. Journal titles
should be abbreviated according to CASSI
(Chemical Abstracts Service Source Index).
References with correct punctuation should
be styled as follows:
Journal articles
Nelson LA, Foglia TA, Marmer WN (1996)
Lipase-Catalyzed Production of Biodiesel.
J Am Oil Chem Soc 73:1191?195
Books
Firestone D (2006) Physical and Chemical
Characteristics of Oils, Fats and Waxes,
2nd edn. AOCS Press, Champaign
Multiauthor books
Gunstone FD (1986) Chemical Properties.
In: Gunstone FD, Harwood JL (eds) The
Lipid Handbook. Chapman & Hall, London,
pp 449?84
Patents
Karnofsky GB, Hansotte RJ (1982) Process
for Extracting Oleaginous Seed Materials.
Particularly Cottonseed with Aqueous Alcohol.
U.S. Patent 4,359,417
Webpage
National Institute of Health (accessed Jan.
2003) Menopausal Hormone Therapy.
http://www.nih.gov/PHTindex.htm
Illustrations and Tables
All figures (photographs, graphs, or
diagrams) and tables should be cited in the
text, and each numbered consecutively
throughout. Lowercase letters (a, b, etc.)
should be used to identify figure parts. If
illustrations are supplied with uppercase
labeling, lowercase letters will still be used
in the figure legends and citations.
Size of figures. The figures should either
match the width of the column (8.6 cm) or
be 13.1 cm or 17.6 cm wide. The maximum
length is 23.6 cm.
Figure legends must be brief, self-sufficient
explanations of the illustrations. The
legends should be placed at the end of the
text.
Online publication of color illustrations is
free of charge. For color in the print version,
authors will be expected to make a contribution
(a 950, US$ 1150, plus 19% VAT)
toward the extra costs, irrespective of the
number of color figures.
Tables should have a title and a legend
explaining any abbreviation used in that
table. Footnotes to tables should be
indicated by superscript lowercase letters
(or asterisks for significance values and
other statistical data).
Equation
Equations should be numbered sequentially
by Arabic numbers in parentheses. The
words ‘‘equation’’ and ‘‘equations’’ should
be abbreviated Eq. and Eqs., followed by
the number except at the beginning of a
sentence.
5 Technical instructions for preparing
your manuscript
Text and figures must be sent as separate
files.
Text
1. Use a normal, plain font (e.g., Times
Roman) for text. Other style options:
?for textual emphasis use italic types.
?for special purposes, such as for
mathematical vectors, use boldface
type.
2. Use the automatic page numbering
function to number the pages.
3. Do not use field functions.
4. For indents use tab stops or other
commands, not the space bar.
5. Use the table functions of your word
processing program, not spreadsheets,
to make tables.
6. Use the equation editor of your word
processing program or MathType for
equations.
7. Place any figure legends or tables at the
end of the article.
8. Submit all figures as separate files and
do not integrate them within the text.
Data formats
Springer offers a template that can be used
with Word 2000 and higher versions at
Springer.com. See: Our services for:
Authors
Text:
Save as: RTF (Rich Text Format) or
Microsoft Word compatible formats
Figures:
EPS or TIFF.
Illustrations
The preferred figure formats are EPS for
vector graphics exported from a drawing
program and TIFF for halftone illustrations.
EPS files must always contain a preview
in TIFF of the figure. The file name (one
file for each figure) should include the
figure number. Figure legends should be
included in the text at the end and not in
the figure file.
?Scan resolution: Scanned line drawings
should be digitized with a minimum
resolution of 1200 dpi relative to the final
figure size. For digital halftones, 300 dpi is
usually sufficient.
?Color illustrations: Store color illustrations
as RGB (8 bits per channel) in TIFF
format.
?Vector graphics: Fonts used in the vector
graphics must be embedded. Please do
not draw with hairlines. The minimum line
width is 0.2 mm (i.e., 0.567 pt) relative to
the final size.
6 Electronic supplementary material
Electronic supplementary material (ESM)
for an article in the journal will be published
in SpringerLink provided the material is:
?submitted to the Editor(s) in electronic
form together with the paper and is
subject to peer review,
?accepted by the journal’s Editor(s).
ESM may consist of
?information that cannot be printed:
animations, video clips, sound recordings
?information that is more convenient in
electronic form: sequences, spectral
data, etc.
?large original data that relate to the
paper, e.g. additional tables, illustrations
(color and black & white), etc.
After acceptance by the journal’s Editor(s)
ESM will be published as received from the
author in the online version only. Reference
will be given in the printed version.
7 Proofreading
Authors should make their proof corrections
on a printout of the PDF file or use
the online correction facilities provided
with the proof. They should check that the
text is complete and that all figures and
tables are included.
After online publication, further changes
can only be made in the form of an
Erratum, which will be hyperlinked to the
article.
The author is entitled to formal corrections
only. Substantial changes in content,
e.g. new results, corrected values,
title, and authorship are not allowed
without the approval of the responsible
editor. In such a case please contact the
Editorial Office before returning the
proofs to the publisher.
8 Offprints, Free copy
One complimentary copy is supplied free of
charge. Orders for offprints can be placed
by returning the order form with the corrected
proofs.
http://www.springer.com/journal/11746
Instructions to Authors

0003-021X.pdf

Editorial Board

 

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
John P. Cherry

SENIOR ASSOCIATE EDITORS

Andrew Proctor
Clifford A. Hall III

Analytical and Physical Chemistry

Susan L. Cuppett
Food, Feed Science and Nutrition
Nutraceuticals and Functional Foods

Michael J. Haas
Biotechnology and Biocatalysis

Frank J. Flider
Nonfood or Industrial Applications

Richard W. Hartel
Processing and Engineering Technology
ASSOCIATE EDITORS
Casimir C. Akoh
Hemendra Basu
Scott Bloomer
Uwe T. Bornscheuer
Leon C. Boyd
Susan Brewer
David L. Compton
John N. Coupland
Michael N.A. Eskin
Thomas A. Foglia
Clifford A. Hall III
Douglas G. Hayes
David F. Hildebrand
Mila P. Hojilla-Evangelista
Ching T. Hou
Thomas J. Jacks
Uruthira Kalapathy
Jerry W. King
Joan M. King
Apostolos K. Kiritsakis
Inmok Lee
Gary R. List
Linda Malcolmson
Kumar D. Mukherjee
Edward J. Parish
Armand B. Pepperman
W.M. Nimal Ratnayake
Joon Shick Rhee
Kiyotaka Sato
J.-L. Sebedio
Jacqueline Sedman
Frederick F. Shih
Yuji Shimada
Sakayu Shimizu
Rishi Shukla
Vijai K.S. Shukla
Daniel K.Y. Solaiman
Bernard Y. Tao
Jorge Toro-Vazquez
Chunyang Wang
Dennis P. Wiesenborn
Richard Wilson
Delilah F. Wood
Tsuneo Yamane

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