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期刊名称:SURFACE COATINGS INTERNATIONAL PART B-COATINGS TRANSACTIONS

ISSN:1476-4865
版本:SCI-CDE
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:SURFEX LTD, PRIORY HOUSE-967 HARROW RD, WEMBLEY, MIDDLESEX, ENGLAND, HA0 2SF
期刊网址:http://www.occa.org.uk/publications/sci/partB/scib_intro.lasso?-session=lgnMdl:9E137E1E65233E49FB53612DE3EAD321
影响因子:无(2008)
主题范畴:CHEMISTRY, APPLIED;    ENGINEERING, CHEMICAL;    MATERIALS SCIENCE, COATINGS & FILMS
变更情况:2007年从SCIE源期刊中删除

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



About the journal

 

Surface Coatings International Part B: Coatings Transactions is a free-standing classical transactions providing Reviews, Papers and Communications relevant to the science and technology of paints, inks and related coatings and their raw materials.

Surface Coatings International Part B is published four times per annum and will include a minimum of fifty papers per volume. All papers are fully refereed and include French and German translation of the English abstracts.

 


Instructions to Authors

 

Surface Coatings International Part B publishes Papers, Reviews and Communications that add significantly to the science and technology of paints, inks and related coatings and their raw materials. Included are reports of advances, innovations or important new information pertaining to analysis, properties, processing, raw materials, products and applications of coatings. Breakthroughs in coatings technology and products and applications are particularly appropriate.

Communications provide a means of publishing brief reports of significant new findings, new features of equipment, instrument or techniques. Because of their brevity, the publication of Communications can be expedited. A less formal style is used for Communications.

Papers and Reviews whose principal contents have been published in English language Journals of Record, or are being considered for publication by another Journal of Record, are not accepted. Approved manuscripts become the property of the Oil & Colour Chemists' Association and may not be reproduced in whole or in part without written permission from the Managing Editor. Click here to download a Transfer of Copyright form (354k).

Send manuscripts to the Managing Editor, Surface Coatings International, 967 Harrow Road, Wembley, HA0 2SF, United Kingdom. Manuscripts must be in English, typed double spaced.

Submit three complete copies and original artwork to the Managing Editor, requesting consideration of the manuscript as a Paper Review or Communication. It is appropriate, but not necessary, to suggest names of possible reviewers.

More specific information follows.

Preparation of Manuscript

Title Page

The title should be brief, descriptive, concise and contain important words for indexing. Limited to 100 characters and spaces.

Authors

Authors' names and the affiliation(s) should be listed. Authors may give their full first name(s) or initial. Authors' names in Cyrillic, Japanese, etc should be transliterated. An asterisk should follow the name of the author to whom correspondence should be addressed. Current addresses of authors, if different from those listed in the byline, and other pertinent information, may be given in a numbered footnote to the respective author's name. In publications originating from several institutions, the names of all authors shall be cited first, with superscript arabic numbers used to refer the reader to the name of the institution to which each author is affiliated.

Page proof recipient

Provide the name and complete mailing address, telephone and fax numbers and email address, if available, of the person who will approve the proofs.

Footnotes

The use of footnotes to the text is discouraged. If used, all footnotes must be brief. All footnotes, except for the author's address, must be numbered consecutively by superscript arabic numerals. Footnotes to the title page may include current addresses of authors, if different from the address where the study was undertaken.

Abstract

Maximum length 100 words with no literature references. The abstracts should briefly state the objective and approach, and give a succinct summary of results and major conclusions. Emphasis should be on what was found, not what was done. The abstract should be written in either English, French or German, according to the linguistic preference of the author.

Keywords

Authors are asked to list, in alphabetical order, five keywords or phrases that describe the subject matter of their paper. Authors should select one keyword or phrase that best describes the subject matter and so indicate by underlining it. Since keywords and phrases will be used for indexing, special attention should be given to their selection.

Introduction

The introduction should be brief and informative with a few key references. It should not be a lengthy review of all background literature. It should be limited to identifying the gap in scientific knowledge or the problem (practical or theoretical) addressed by the research. This should seldom require more than 500 words. Ideally, not more than 8 to 10 references should be cited.

Experimental procedures (where applicable)

Sufficient detail or literature reference to methods used should be included to permit others to repeat or extend the experiment. Provide a company name and location for sources of all chemicals, instruments and equipment, except in cases of very common items for which company name alone may be listed.

Also provide an overview of the experimental approach used, especially in the case of complex or unusual design. Provide information on the experimental procedures, including sample preparation, the type of test(s) used and efforts to balance or randomise samples and/or tests, with enough detail to enable others to repeat the experiment(s). Describe how the data was evaluated; in most cases data should be evaluated by statistical analysis and a proper procedure reference.

Results and Discussions

These should be in a section that relates what was found and how it addresses the gap or problem identified in the introduction. Lengthy speculation should be omitted. This section should be organised to supplement, but not repeat, data in tables and figures and to present, in narrative form, equations, formulae and data for which tables or figures are unnecessary.

Acknowledgements

These should be presented as a group in simplest form.

References

These should appear in numerical order within the text, in parenthesis in numerical sequence and listed under References by number in the order cited. Use ibid for repeating references to the same journal. The first author should be listed last name first, followed by initials; subsequent authors are listed by initials followed by last name. The subsequent order should be: Full title of the paper, name of the journal, volume number in bold, issue number in parenthesis, page number(s), month of publication, year of publication.

Books or conference proceedings should be listed by the first author (last name followed by initials), subsequent authors (initials followed by last name), title of book, publisher, location of publisher, year of publication. For patents, the reference listings should be first author (last name followed by initials), subsequent authors (initials followed by last name), patent number, year.

Following are examples of a correct format for listing references:

1. Murakami T, R H Fernando and J E Glass, 'The Influence of Hydrophobically-Modified, Alkali-Swellable Emulsions on the Rheology of Pigmented Coatings', JOCCA, 76, (1), 8-14, January 1993.

2. Roffey C G, 'Photopolymerisation of Surface Coatings', John Wiley & Sons, Chichester, 1982.

3. Linton H, US Patent 3.470.007, 1993

Tables, Figures, Graphs and Schemes

All tables etc must be referred to in the main text because their position on the published pages cannot be guaranteed.

Do not include tables in the text, but place on separate sheet(s), numbered (arabic) and titled.

Tables should be understandable without reference to the text. Photographs and slides are acceptable. Do not embed them in the text, but place each on a separate sheet. Any artwork must be of a good quality.

Computer disk preparation

Electronic files should be organised as follows

A text file containing text, references and figure captions; a table file containing tables (if applicable); a separate file for each figure. For text, files in "Word" format are preferred. In addition, use the "Save As" option in your wordprocessor programme to save a separate copy of each file in RTF, ASCII (PC) or Text Only (Macintosh) format on to your disk. Figures should be saved in Photoshop, Illustrator or Freehand, or exported to one of the following formats at a high resolution:

TIFF, JPEG, PCX (for PC), PICT (for Mac), bitmapped, Chemdraw, or GIF formats. Proprietary formats such as Microsoft's PowerPoint or Word, particularly those containing photographs generally do not provide high quality output and should not be submitted.

As the publication is printed in black only, colour should not be used. However, colour reproduction of photographs will be used if the author considers that colour is essential. Please contact the Managing Editor for advise.

Formulae and equations

Set in-text equations on one line, eg a = b ÷ (c – d). However, equations intended to be displayed on a line by themselves should be set display style,

Do not confuse mathematical symbols with abbreviations.

Abbreviations

Many familiar notations appear without periods, eg mL,g,sh. If abbreviating terms, please spell them out when they first appear. Abbreviations may be introduced in the Abstract for terms used more than once. However, this does not replace the need to define them again the first time they are used. SI system is required (other units optional in parenthesis); use decimal, not fractions, and percentage symbol (%) only after numbers; degrees Celsius or degrees Fahrenheit or degrees Kelvin. Typewritten or handwritten characters that are subject to misinterpretation (eg Greek letters) must be spelled out in the margin the first time they appear. Commercial products should be expressed by common name or scientific name (if one exists) followed by trade name in parenthesis only if essential; promotional statements concerning commercial products are unacceptable.

Appendices

Where material in tabular form is used for general reference purposes, this may appear at the end of the article in an appendix. The appendices must be referred to in the text.

Corrections and proofs

Page proofs will be submitted to the author before publication. Corrected proofs, must be returned as soon as possible after receipt. The Managing Editor reserves the right to publish papers without authors' corrections if proofs are not returned by the due date.

Other information

The principal author will receive, free of charge, 5 copies of the issue of Surface Coatings International Part B, containing his paper. Offprints may be purchased in quantities of 50 or more; quotations will be sent on request.

The Chairman of the Editorial Advisory Board is always willing to assist or advise potential authors. He can be contacted by telephone +41 61 636 4568 or fax +41 61 636 7996 or email simon.lawrence@cibasc.com or write to Dr S G Lawrence at Ciba Specialty Chemical Inc. Colors, WKL - 424.2.08, CH-4002, Basle, Switzerland. Alternatively, authors may contact the Honorary Editor, Dr P S Thukral at 175 The Avenue, Sunbury on Thames, Middlesex TW16 5EH, United Kingdom, telephone: +44 (0)1932 780208 or fax +44 (0)1932 770095 or the Managing Editor by telephone: +44 (0)20 8908 1086 or fax: +44 (0)20 8908 1219 or email sci@occa.org.uk or write to Mr C Pacey-Day, Surface Coatings International, Priory House, 967 Harrow Road, Wembley HA0 2SF, United Kingdom.

 


Editorial Board

 

Dr S G Lawrence (simon.lawrence@cibasc.com)
Ciba Specialty Chemical - Color (Switzerland)
Chairman, Coatings Transactions Advisory Board

Dr P T Thukral (premthukral@cwctv.net)
Consultant (UK)
Honorary Editor, Surface Coatings International

Mr S A Ray
Consultant (UK)
Consultant Editor

Dr P A B Carstens (pabc@aec.co.za)
Nuclear Energy Corporation SA (South Africa)
Surface modification of plastics (especially surface fluorination), characterisation of surfaces, adhesion evaluation and barrier properties introduced by surface modification

Dr R M Christie (r.m.christie@hw.ac.uk)
University of Heriott-Watt (UK)
Colour technology, pigment & dyes, chemistry of surface coatings

Prof. S J Clarson (s.clarson@uceng.uc.edu)
University of Cincinnatti (USA)
Silicone/Silane chemistry, plasma polymerisation, surface characterisation, surface modification, adhesion and adhesives

Dr Tim C Claypole (t.c.claypole@swansea.ac.uk)
University of Wales (UK)
Printing Technology, coating technology, rheology, engineering, fluid dynamics colour, experimental design

Prof J W Davison (john@davchemo.demon.co.uk)
Davison Chemographics (UK)
Printing Ink Research: Analysis/Formulation/Manufacture/Proof Printing/Ink & Print Testing in All Printing Processes. Lecturer/Examiner/Expert Witness

Prof. Dr Claus D. Eisenbach (cde@fpl.uni-stuttgart.de)
Forchungsinstitut für Pigmente und Lacke E.V. (Germany)
(Research Institute for Pigments and Coatings)
Polymer Science; Macromolecular Synthesis; Structure-properties relationships; Particulate Systems & Organic Coatings, Properties and Performance of Pigments and Coatings, Polymer and Coatings Analysis

Prof. J Guthrie (ccdjtg@leeds.ac.uk)
University of Leeds (UK)
Functional Polymer; copolymers, composites and blends, natural polymers (especially cellulotics), UV curing technology, printing, packaging and conversion, colours in polymeric systems

Mr G H Hutchinson
Consultant (UK)
Printing ink technology, drying oils and varnish media, vegetable oil technology

Dr Abul Iqbal (abul.iqbal@web.de)
IQchem Inc. (Switzerland)

Dr Ahmad I Jomha (tech@sipcopaints.com)
SIPCO Paints (Saudi Arabia)
Rheology/Colloid science, mixing and paint technology

Mr J R Kelsey (KelseyJ@BP.com)
BP Amoco (UK)
Solvents, VOCs, Product Legislation, Chemicals Management, Classification & Labelling, IT

Dr Matjaz Kunaver (matjaz.kunaver@ki.si)
National Institute of Chemistry (Slovenia)
Surface Coatings - Interactions within the system, additives, pigments & pigments dispersion, methods for the evaluation of pigment dispersions and coatings in general

Dr Loh Wah Sing (lohws@psb.gov.sg)
Singapore Productivity Board (Singapore)
Formulation, dispersion, rheology, weathering, performance evaluation, test method development, quality/environmental management system, waste minimisation

Dr Lubonir Lukac (llukac@eastman.com)
Chemické Zavody Sokolov a.a. (Czech Republic)
R & D, TS & D - coatings, adhesives, chemicals, development projects, capitol projects

Prof. V C Malshe (vcmalshe@vsnl.com/vcmalshe@usa.net)
University of Mumbai (India)
High performance coatings, synthesis of polymers, pigments, catalysis, functional polymers, ion exchange resins, water treatment and water purification

Mr Koichiro Murata (murata@als.kansai.co.jp)
Kansai Paint Co. (Japan)
High polymer synthesis, colour materials

Dr A A Pud (echoc@mail.kar.net)
National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine (Ukraine)
Electrochemical and chemical stability and degradation of polymer materials; cathodic delamination (disbonding) of protective coatings, corrosion resisting properties of conductors polymers and of coatings with these polymers, conducting polymer composites and blends

Prof. W E Smith (w.e.smith@strath.ac.uk)
University of Edinburgh (UK)
Pigments, dyes, Raman scattering

Mr G N Tewari (gntewari@hotmail.com)
Punjab Paint, Colour & Varnishes Works Ltd (India)
Water-based coatings & resins

Dr A Toussaint (andre.toussaint@pi.be)
Institut Meurice-Chemie (Belgium)
Rheology of liquid paints, mechanical properties of paint films, film formation (latexes/crosslinked systems), pigment dispersion, polymer solubility & compatibility

Dr T-H Tran-Thi (tranthi@drecam.cea.fr)
CEA/Saclay (France)
Photoinduced charged transfer in Laugmuir-Blodgett thin films of donor-acceptor compounds; photochemical properties of sol-gel materials doped with organic chromophores; time-resolved (femto to milliseconds), spectroscopy (absorption and fluorescence) of donor-acceptor compounds in various media, from solutions to organized assemblies; sensors for air pollutants based on thin films of hybrid organic-inorganic polymers

Prof. N Uyanik (uyanik@itu.edu.tr)
Istanbul Technical Universit (Turkey)
Synthesis and physical & mechanical characterization of block copolymers, studies on copolymerization kinetics, polymeric gels

Prof. D J Walton (d.walton@coventry.ac.uk)
Coventry University (UK)
Electrochemical, electronic and optical properties of thin films of organic compounds & their applications (eg sensors)

Prof. Toshiya Watanabe (watanabe@fchem.chem.t.u-tokyu.ac.jp)
University of Tokyo (Japan)
Photocatalyst, ceramic coatings (thin film), sol-gel technology transfer

Dr Qialong Yuan (yuanqiaolong@online.sh.cn)
East China University of Science & Technology, Shanghai (Republic of China)
Preparation, characterization and application of inorganic nanoparticles-organic polymers. Hybrids, especially in water-based systems

Dr M Zielecka (mziel@ichp.waw.pl)
Industrial Chemistry Research Institute (Poland)
Silicones, silicone-containing hybrid polymers, silicone agents for protection of building materials, wettability of various surfaces (dynamic contact angle measurements, surface free energy calculations)

 



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