期刊名称:CRYSTALLOGRAPHY REPORTS
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
SCOPE Crystallography Reports (Kristallografiya), founded in 1956, publishes original papers, short communications, and reviews on different aspects of crystallography: diffraction and scattering of X-rays, electrons and neutrons; X-ray, electron, and neutron diffraction determination of crystal structure of inorganic and organic materials, including proteins and other biological objects; optical and radiowave spectroscopy; growth, real structure and physical properties of crystals; thin films and partly disordered systems; and the methods used in these studies.
Crystallography Reports is abstracted and/or indexed in Current Physics Index, INSPEC, PASCAL, Physics Abstracts, SPIN, Science Citation Index, SciSearch, Research Alert, Chemistry Citation Index, Materials Science Citation Index, Reaction Citation Index, Current Contents.
The journal was founded in 1956.
Instructions to Authors
These notes are intended as a guide for authors pre-paring the presentation of their manuscripts. These guidelines, if adhered to, save the author, publisher, and printer much labor and will ease the passage of an article through the production process. Only original articles and review articles on all aspects of crystallography can be submitted. An original article should describe new unpublished results not sent for publication in any other edition. The sequence of the materials presented is as follows:
- Title of the article
- Names of all the authors with the initials before their names.
- Affiliations of all the authors.
- Addresses of all the authors (including the city and country and their post codes, telephone and fax numbers, and e-mail addresses (if any).
- Abstract.
- List of Contents (for review articles only).
- List of References.
- Tables.
- List of Figure Captions.
- Figures.
ABSTRACTS
The article should be preceded by the title of the Section in which the article is suggested to be published (the List of Sections is given at the end of the Guidelines) and a short abstract containing not more than 100 words (on a separate sheet) in which the author(s) should formulate the aim of the study and describe the results obtained. Be aware that the abstract and the conclusion(s) section should not repeat one another.
TYPESCRIPTS
Copy, to be submitted in duplicate, should be typed 1.5 spaced on one side of standard (A4) good quality sheets with a wide left margin (3 cm), 1.5-cm right margin, and 2.5-cm top and bottom margins. The article should not exceed 10 pages in 14-point font. The author(s) should briefly and clearly describe their work. One should avoid reporting the same data both in the text and tables or figures and figure captions. Neither should one present the same data simultaneously in tabulated and graphical form. It is desirable to divide the text into sections with appropriate headings. This should necessarily be done in the review articles. One should avoid paragraphs that are too long. A review article should be preceded by a list of contents. One should avoid the use of nonstandard abbreviations. Consistency in the use of abbreviations is also very important. The number of abbreviations used should not be large, and they should all be identified when they first occur in the text. All the pages of the typescript should be consecutively numbered (including the abstract, text, list of references, tables, and figure captions). Along with the typed text of the articles and figures, the article should also be presented as a Word file on an IBM compatible 3.5" diskette. The articles dedicated to structure determinations should be supplied with a “standard?crystallographic information file (CIF), which should preliminarily be checked by the author(s) against the A, B, and C alerts automatically at the e-mail address: chekcif@iucr.org or with the aid of the PLATON Internet program at the address http://www.chem.gla.ac.uk/~louis. The editorial board reserves the right to check the CIF and to return the articles to the author(s) for the correction of unreliable information (alert A). The presence of alerts B and C should be supplied with the author(s)’s comments. Upon the acceptance of the article for publication, the author(s) should deposit the crystallographic data file (CIF) in
(a) Inorganic Crystal Structure Database ICSD (Karlsruhe, Germany) at the e-mail address crysdata@fiz-karlsruhe.de (for inorganic structures). The deposited article should be submitted with the corresponding reference number in the form ICSD no. ? (b) Cambridge Structural Database CSD at the Cambridge Crystallographic Data Center (CCDC) (Cambridge, United Kingdom) at the e-mail address deposit@ccdc.cam.ac.uk (for crystal structures containing at least one “organic?carbon atom. The deposited article should be submitted with the corresponding reference number in the form CCDC no. ? The form for submitting CIF can be obtained automatically at the e-mail address deposit@ccdc.cam.ac.uk with the sendme depform or via the Internet at the address http://www.ccdc.cam.ac.uk.
The data submitted will be included in the corresponding data bases only upon the publication of the corresponding articles. In addition to the preliminary deposit of CIF in the above data bases, the authors should also send these CIF to the regional representative of the CCDC to the Nesmeyanov Institute of Organoelement Compounds, Russian Academy of Sciences, at the e-mail address star@xray.ineos.ac.ru The article should be signed by all the authors.
REFERENCES
References are indicated in the text by consecutive arabic numbers in square brackets. The full list of references should be collected and typed at the end of the paper in numerical order (on separate sheets). Listed references should be complete in all details excluding article titles in journals. Authors?initials are placed after their names. The journal title abbreviations should conform to Physical Abstracts. Examples:
1. D. L. Wood and J. P. Remeika, J. Appl. Phys. 38, 1038 (1976). 2. P. Mauerberger, H. J. Haupt, and F. Huber, Acta Crystallogr., Sect. B: Struct. Crystallogr. Cryst. Chem. 35 (2), 295 (1975). 3. G. E. Bacon, Neutron Diffraction (Clarendon, Oxford, 1955; Inostrannaya Literatura, Moscow, 1967). 4. S. A. Pikin, Structural Transformations in Liquid Crystals (Nauka, Moscow, 1981; Gordon and Breach, New York, 1991). 5. J. J. Conway and N. J. A. Sloane, Sphere Packings, Lattices, and Groups (Springer-Verlag, New York, 1988), Vols. 1, 2. 6. N. N. Vorontsov, Principles of Synthesis of Intermediate Products and Dyes (Goskhimizdat, Moscow, 1955). 7. M. L. Meilman, I. D. Ryabov, A. I. Mottchanui, and P. P. Chvanski in Proceedings of the 3rd European Workshop on Piezoelectric Materials: Crystal Growth, Properties and Prospects, Montpellier, France, 2000, p. 213. 8. G. M. Sheldrick, SHELXTL97: Program for the Solution and Refinement of Crystal Structures (University of Göttingen, Göttingen, 1997).
All the references given in the List of References should necessarily be mentioned in the text.
TABLES
Data collected in tables should be presented in a clear and concise form to help both typesetter and reader. Indicate clearly where in the typescript you would like the tables to be placed. Your instructions will be followed as far as technically possible. Number the tables consecutively with arabic numerals (Table 1, Table 2, etc.), and put a clear descriptive caption at the top of each table.
ILLUSTRATIONS
All the figures should be presented in a clear form in a format as close as possible to a square shape. All the details should be clearly resolved (this is especially important for photographs). Illustrations should be presented on separate sheets and should not be glued to the typescript. The figure captions should also be typed on a separate sheet, numbered by consecutive arabic number (Fig. 1, Fig. 2, etc.), and mentioned in sequential order in the text. Keep illustrations separate from the text, but indicate clearly an approximate position for each in the margin. One should indicate the name of the first authors and the figure number on the front side of each figure. One should avoid any text in the figures by substituting the necessary text by a letter or a number symbol either in the corresponding figure caption or in the text of the article. Two copies of each photograph should be presented on white glossy photographic paper. One of the copies should not have any writing on the front side. For micrographs, one should indicate the scale of imaging in the lower right-hand corner (and not the magnification).
EQUATIONS AND FORMULAS
Whenever possible, mathematical equations should be typewritten in large and distinct letters. One should avoid too cumbersome notation to facilitate setting. One should avoid unnecessary multiplication signs. The subscripts and superscripts should be clearly shown (by pencil marks and ). It is useful to iden-tify unusual or ambiguous symbols in the margin when they first occur. To simplify typesetting, please use: (1) the "exp" form of complex exponential functions; (2) fractional exponents instead of root signs; (3) the solidus (/) to simplify fractions,e.g.,
MARKING
The printer will set mathematical symbols in italics, except for obvious groups like sin and log. Any symbols which are to be left in roman (upright) type should be underlined with a square bracket in pencil in the typescript; bold symbols should be underlined with a blue pencil, greek letters should be underlined with a red pencil. The super- and subscripts should be indicated in pencil by signs and . One should underline with three lines the upper-case letters C, K, O, U, V, W, and and supply with three bars the low-case letters c, k, o, u, v, w, and ; the symbol 0 (zero) is indicated by a square bracket under it (0). Only the first copy of the article (including all the formulas, tables, figures, and figure captions) should be marked in accordance with the above guidelines. One should indicate on a separate sheet the data necessary for correspondence: the author's name, his address, the telephone and fax numbers, and the e-mail address.
All the articles are sent to a referee and then can be sent back to the authors for necessary revision and introducing the corrections. This work should be done within four months, otherwise a new date of the acceptance of the manuscript will be indicated in the final publication.
The Editorial Board reserves the right to make necessary abridgements and to introduce some necessary stylistic corrections in the manuscript.
The Editorial Board reserves the right to make necessary abridgements and to introduce some necessary stylistic corrections in the manuscript.
If the article is rejected, only one copy is sent back to the author(s).
The Editorial Board will send the authors the reprints of their articles both in Russian and English.
LIST OF SECTIONS
1. Crystallographic Symmetry 2. Theory of Crystal Structures 3. Crystal Chemistry 4. Diffraction and Scattering of Ionizing Radiations 5. Structure of Inorganic Compounds 6. Structure of Organic Compounds 7. Structure of Macromolecular Compounds 8. Real Structure of Crystals 9. Lattice Dynamics and Phase Transitions 10. Physical Properties of Crystals 11. Liquid Crystals 12. Surface, Thin Films, and Nanomaterials 13. Crystal Growth 14. Apparatus 15. Crystallographic Software 16. History of Crystallography 17. Anniversaries 18. Memorial Data 19. Obituaries 20. Information
Editorial Board
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Lev A. Shuvalov, Professor, Shubnikov Institute of Crystallography, Russian Academy of Sciences (RAS), Moscow, Russia
DEPUTY EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Mikhail V. Koval'chuk
EXECUTIVE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Alisa F. Konstantinova, Shubnikov Institute of Crystallography, RAS, Moscow, Russia
EDITORIAL BOARD Kirill S. Aleksandrov, Institute of Physics, Siberian Division, RAS, Krasnoyarsk, Russia; Vladimir I. Alshits, Shubnikov Institute of Crystallography, RAS, Moscow, Russia; Khachik S. Bagdasarov, Shubnikov Institute of Crystallography, RAS, Moscow, Russia; Vladimir E. Dmitrienko, Shubnikov Institute of Crystallography, RAS, Moscow, Russia; Nina G. Furmanova, Shubnikov Institute of Crystallography, RAS, Moscow, Russia; Vladimir A. Koptsik, Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia; Mikhail G. Mil’vidskii, State Institute for Rare Metals, Moscow, Russia; Valerian I. Nikitenko, Institute of Solid-State Physics, RAS, Chernogolovka, Russia; Yurii A. Osip’yan, Institute of Solid-State Physics, RAS, Chernogolovka, Russia; Mikhail A. Osipov, Shubnikov Institute of Crystallography, RAS, Moscow, Russia; Sergei A. Pikin, Shubnikov Institute of Crystallography, RAS, Moscow, Russia; Dmitrii Yu. Pushcharovskii, Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia; Leonid N. Rashkovich, Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia; Valentin I. Simonov, Shubnikov Institute of Crystallography, RAS, Moscow, Russia; Lev A. Feigin, Shubnikov Institute of Crystallography, RAS, Moscow, Russia; Aleksandr A. Chernov, Shubnikov Institute of Crystallography, RAS, Moscow, Russia.
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