Normas de Colaboración
A1.N. Last-Names1, A2.N. Last-Names2 β, A3.N. Last-Names3 γ
First adscription Institution (group authors by institution)
“Laboratory name (if official), Department or Institute, Institution
City, State, Zip Code, Country”
β Additional adscription. In case of a second institution for one or
several authors, place
an alphabet character superscript after author’s name starting from
β. If that is the only
institution γ for a subsequent group of authors, you can place
the symbol there as well.
A4.N. Last-Names4 *,
Second adscription Institution
A5.N. Last-Names5, A6.N. Last-Names6
γ Third adscription
Institution
Consider this as an example of author list format for our journal and
that
you need to decide how to accommodate the authors in this format
* Corresponding author should be defined from the very start; and must be
the
responsible for upload to OJS platform and communication with the editors.
(Received: ## Month 2016; Accepted: ## MonthX 201#) (Keep this line, introducing day of upload)
An abstract
must be included in the manuscript, it should give the
readers an overview of the presented research. Its content should suffice to
give a clear idea of the research you intend to present in your article; what
is the new information presented; aim, results and conclusions of general
interest within the paper. It should be written as a single paragraph and
should not include footnotes, citations, equations or
tabulated content. The extension for the abstract should be no less than 150
words and no more than 250 words. Please use this file with its formatting style
and instructions to prepare your manuscript before uploading it to our Open
Journal Systems (OJS) platform. Please make an effort to follow all the
instructions described in this template; failure to do
so will result in direct rejection of your contribution.
Keywords: Are no longer required,
considering that primary publication format is
electronic, and metadata information allows for rapid search.
Introduction
This template is written in
English because it is the desired language for your contributions. We strongly
recommend the use of English language for your manuscript since it will give
your results a greater projection and impact. Either way, for contributions
written in Spanish, it is required to send the English translation of title and
abstract.
Please use this template to write your manuscript from
the very start, if possible; if not, be sure to paste your previously prepared
materials avoiding to carry on their original formatting, in case it was
different. The parameters shown in Figure 1 could be helpful for coincidence in
text formatting of gyour previously prepared text.
Figures should be cited using the full word, with the
first letter in capital and the corresponding number. Please insert each Figure
with its caption near the citing text, leaving one blank line before and one
after. Remember that all labels in every Figure should be readable after
reduction to a maximum width of 8.5
cm.
Figure 1. Paragraph formatting parameters
for the preparation of your manuscript.
Use “times new roman” font type, with 12 points size.
Paragraph configuration parameters should be used for
the entire manuscript, except for the Title
and the Authors/Adscriptions list;
which shall be ‘centered’. Use boldface letters for the Title (only the first character is a capital letter); regular letters for Author listing. And cursive letters for Adscription
institutions, in the given format.
Take your time and thought in deciding your
manuscript’s Title; it should
provide a good idea of what readers could expect to find after they read the
entire article.
There is no need for the use of an Abstract header.
The single paragraph text included after the Authors/Adscriptions list will be considered as
such. Furthermore, you will be asked to paste the
abstract of your manuscript at the metadata of our Open Journal Systems platform
of Superficies y Vacío (http://smctsm.org.mx/ojs/index.php/SyV/login).
When citing a reference of several authors using an
author’s last name in the manuscript body, it should be the full last name of
the first author (strictly), followed by the expression “et al.”, which is a common abbreviation for Latin expression “et alia”, meaning “and others”.
When listing 2 or more references, please use: [5,6], [7-9,11]; without spaces after the semicolons and using
an hyphen for a series of consecutive reference numbers.
Footnotes are allowed, but they must be written as the corresponding
reference [number] and placed in the reference list.
Experimental details
Please write the names as commonly used by each author; in order to facilitate the association of this paper with
others from the same author. Within the authors list at the beginning of this
manuscript use initials for given and middle names (e.g. J.F. Kennedy, without
space between initials); meanwhile, at the metadata within the OJS platform you
can use those names in full, in case it is desired (either John F. Kennedy or
John Fitzgerald Kennedy). Please be sure to provide the information requested
in the metadata section of the OJS platform; consider the inclusion of ORCID
numbers, at least for the corresponding author.
The next Sections are suggested:
Introduction; Experimental details; Results
and discussion; Conclusions; Acknowledgements; and References (boldface, without
numbering). Their titles can differ, in accordance with the type of research
that you are presenting. The first paragraph following a section header should be separated by a line; except for Acknowledgements
and References sections that must be placed in the line succeeding the header.
This document follows the spacing requests between section headers, previous
and subsequent paragraphs, etc.
Sub-section (in italics,
without numbering)
Sub-sectioning is acceptable as far as it is required
by the extension of a section; please avoid to abuse
sub-sectioning. The first paragraph after a sub-section header should be in the
next line.
We encourage the authors to thoroughly revise and
discuss the English writing of your manuscript.
We request to include in the letter of presentation
to the editors: the name, adscription institution and contact details of
three researchers that could serve as reviewers of your manuscript; this could
be helpful in order to reduce decision times.
Results and discussion
Arabic numbers should be used
for both, Figures and Tables; and they should be cited using the entire word,
with the first letter in capital (Figure 3, Table 2).
You are asked to limit the number of Figures and
Tables to a maximum of 5 and 3, respectively. In case
you consider the need for additional Figures or Tables, you must include in the
letter of presentation to the editors, arguments justifying the
relevance of all the included material in the presentation and discussion of
your results, leading to the conclusions.
In case you need to use a special symbol, like
alphabet characters (α, β, γ,…), please
introduce it from the “Insert” – “Symbol” menu option, using “Normal text”
option. This will prevent typo mistakes after editorial formatting of your manuscript.
Insert each Table with its header and captions near
the citing text, leaving one blank line before and one after. Formatting scheme
is shown in Table 1. BE SELECTIVE on the parameters
and values that you present in Tables; tables for double column width are
acceptable, but even in these cases some troubles have arisen.
Table 1. Taken from a published article which allowed fixing to an 8.5 cm width, here is an
example for the preparation of Tables.
TiO2-Sn(x) a Photocatalyst |
Sn content a (%at.) b |
Dp a (Å) |
Vt a (cm3/g) |
SBET a (m2/g) |
||
|
Theory |
XPS |
EDS |
|
|
|
0.0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
99 |
0.30 |
105 |
0.1 |
5.5 |
5 |
4 |
87 |
0.53 |
171 |
0.2 |
12 |
10 |
9 |
32 |
0.16 |
160 |
0.3 |
19 |
12 |
14 |
40 |
0.12 |
95 |
0.4 |
26 |
15 |
17 |
53 |
0.15 |
90 |
0.5 |
35 |
17 |
20 |
62 |
0.21 |
84 |
a The column header
(parameter symbol or abbreviation), in boldface.
b The units (within parenthesis), in regular font.
For writing quantities and relations within the text,
you need to leave a space between symbols (=, ~, >, <, etc) and values (either numeric or algebraic). Also
leave a space between numeric values and the corresponding units; including “%”,
“°C” and “K” in this rule. In the case
of atomic or weight percentages, use “at%” or
“wt%”, correspondingly. When separating quantities by
hyphen (which must be short –as for indicating an interval), leave a space
before and after the hyphen (A - B).
A few examples:
~ 2128 cm-1
AC/NiMo > NiMo-AC > NiMo (where
“AC/NiMo” and “NiMo-AC”
were sample names)
37 %
AC/Mo = 1
50 - 450 °C
Try to avoid
the splitting of this kind of mathematical relations in two lines, unless they
are larger than a single line.
Acknowledgements
The importance of acknowledging the technical
assistance of people and the funding from institutions, either through regular
programs or specific projects is unquestionable; and sometimes represents the
continuity of support.
Please include in this section, the information, if
any, regarding previous or current adscription status of an author in an
institution, in case such information differs from the one shown in authors
list.
References
The listing of references must be done with “[#]. ” (only one space left before the
first initial).
For references with multiple
authors, you need to include all the authors in the same order as appearing in
the source; please use initials for given names (G.N. – without space between
initials) and use full last names (as appear in the source), please take a few
minutes to verify which is the last name, if you have doubt; only use commas
(,) to separate between authors (including the last one, DON’T use “and”); also
use a comma to separate the publication name
(in italics) from the authors list.
Please provide a link through Digital Object
Identifier (DOI) number for each reference (i.e. http://dx.doi.org/DOI.number). In case of sources without a DOI, please include the best link
leading to the cited document.
For articles, use the abbreviated journal names (using
dots), taken from the following lists:
https://images.webofknowledge.com/WOK46/help/zh_CN/WOS/A_abrvjt.html
http://www.sciencemag.org/site/feature/contribinfo/prep/res/journal_abbrevs.xhtml
For books, use the full name and provide the ISSN and
a link to a page describing the book, preferably within the publisher’s
website.
We encourage you to avoid citing web pages, please
search for alternate sources. This is due to temporal nature of their content. In
case it is absolutely indispensable to use a web page
as reference, arguments should be addressed to the editors in the letter of
presentation, and the cited content/page should be sent in a PDF file, as
supplementary material.
All cited documents should be accessible for public, either for free or by subscription or purchase. In any case,
a Table of Contents listing the document should be freely accessible.
As mentioned
before, footnotes are allowed, but they must be
written as the corresponding reference [number] and placed in the reference
list.
Take a few minutes and write all your references
according to the following examples for different source references; remember
that failure to do this sets grounds for quick rejection, unless the reference type is missing in this
document.
[1]. E. Galopin, L. Touahir, J. Niedziołka-Jönsson,
R. Boukherroub, A. Gouget-Laemmel,
J. Chazalviel, F. Ozanam,
S. Szunerits, Biosens.
Bioelectron. 25, 1199 (2010).
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bios.2009.10.012
[2]. L. Gelczuk, M. Dąbrowska-Szata, Opt.
Appl. 39, 845 (2009).
http://www.if.pwr.wroc.pl/~optappl/pdf/2009/no4/optappl_3904p845.pdf
[2]. C. Iliescu, D.P. Poenar,
in: Physics and Technology of Silicon Carbide Devices, Ed. Y. Hijikata (InTech, 2013) p.
131-134.
http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/51224
[3]. H. Topsoe, B.S.
Clausen, F.E. Massoth, Hydrotreating Catalysis (vol. 11), Catal.-Sci. Technol.
(Springer, Berlin, 1996).
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-61040-0_1
[4]. K. Tanaka, E. Maruyama, T. Shimada, H. Okamoto, Amorphous
Silicon, 1st ed. (Wiley, 1999) p. 136-137.
ISBN: 978-0-471-98293-7
http://www.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-0471982938.html
[5]. C.
García-Robles, Master’s Thesis
“Escenario de consumo de energía y emisiones de gases de efecto invernadero del
transporte de pasajeros de la Zona Metropolitana de la Ciudad de México” (UNAM,
2010).
http://www.ptolomeo.unam.mx:8080/jspui/handle/132.248.52.100/3995
(Please provide full title and electronic address for Thesis
access)
[6]. Mexican Official Standard NOM-042-SEMARNAT-2003
(Secretaría del Medio Ambiente y Recursos Naturales, México, 2005).
http://www.profepa.gob.mx/innovaportal/file/1208/1/nom-042-semarnat-2003.pdf
(Please provide a link for document access, along with
sufficient information for search, in case the link eventually changes)
[7]. N.K. Keppy, G. Bain,
M.W. Allen, Application Note 51853:
Determination of Free Glycerol in Biodiesel with the Evolution Array UV-Visible
Spectrophotometer (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Madison, WI, USA).
http://www.analiticaweb.com.br/newsletter/08/AN51853_Biodiesel_UV.pdf
(Please provide a link for document access, along with
sufficient information for search, in case the link eventually changes)
[8]. G.A. Landis, U.S. patent 9,418,844 (16 August
2016). (When
already issued)
[8]. G.A. Landis, U.S. patent application 14/814,898
(31 July 2015). (When it has only been filed)
Revista de Acceso Abierto