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Expanding the Educational Toolset for Chemistry Outreach: Providing a Chemical View of Climate Change through Hands-On Activities and Demonstrations Supplemented with TED-Ed Videos

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Beyond "Inert" Ideas to Teaching General Chemistry from Rich Contexts: Visualizing the Chemistry of Climate Change (VC3)

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Educational Modules on the Power-to-Gas Concept Demonstrate a Path to Renewable Energy Futures

Imparting Scientific Literacy through an Online Materials Chemistry General Education Course

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An Interdisciplinary, Project-Based Inquiry into the Chemistry and Geology of Alkaline Surface Lake Waters in the General Chemistry Laboratory

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Facile Method To Study Catalytic Oxygen Evolution Using a Dissolved Oxygen Optical Probe: An Undergraduate Chemistry Laboratory To Appreciate Artificial Photosynthesis

Investigating NOx Concentrations on an Urban University Campus Using Passive Air Samplers and UV-Vis Spectroscopy

Understanding Our Energy Footprint: Undergraduate Chemistry Laboratory Investigation of Environmental Impacts of Solid Fossil Fuel Wastes

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journal of chemical education

The set of journals have been ranked according to their SJR and divided into four equal groups, four quartiles. Q1 (green) comprises the quarter of the journals with the highest values, Q2 (yellow) the second highest values, Q3 (orange) the third highest values and Q4 (red) the lowest values.

CategoryYearQuartile
Chemistry (miscellaneous)1999Q2
Chemistry (miscellaneous)2000Q2
Chemistry (miscellaneous)2001Q2
Chemistry (miscellaneous)2002Q3
Chemistry (miscellaneous)2003Q3
Chemistry (miscellaneous)2004Q3
Chemistry (miscellaneous)2005Q3
Chemistry (miscellaneous)2006Q3
Chemistry (miscellaneous)2007Q3
Chemistry (miscellaneous)2008Q3
Chemistry (miscellaneous)2009Q3
Chemistry (miscellaneous)2010Q2
Chemistry (miscellaneous)2011Q2
Chemistry (miscellaneous)2012Q3
Chemistry (miscellaneous)2013Q2
Chemistry (miscellaneous)2014Q2
Chemistry (miscellaneous)2015Q2
Chemistry (miscellaneous)2016Q2
Chemistry (miscellaneous)2017Q2
Chemistry (miscellaneous)2018Q2
Chemistry (miscellaneous)2019Q2
Chemistry (miscellaneous)2020Q2
Chemistry (miscellaneous)2021Q2
Chemistry (miscellaneous)2022Q2
Chemistry (miscellaneous)2023Q2
Education1999Q2
Education2000Q2
Education2001Q2
Education2002Q3
Education2003Q2
Education2004Q2
Education2005Q3
Education2006Q3
Education2007Q3
Education2008Q3
Education2009Q3
Education2010Q3
Education2011Q2
Education2012Q3
Education2013Q2
Education2014Q2
Education2015Q2
Education2016Q2
Education2017Q2
Education2018Q2
Education2019Q2
Education2020Q2
Education2021Q2
Education2022Q2
Education2023Q2

The SJR is a size-independent prestige indicator that ranks journals by their 'average prestige per article'. It is based on the idea that 'all citations are not created equal'. SJR is a measure of scientific influence of journals that accounts for both the number of citations received by a journal and the importance or prestige of the journals where such citations come from It measures the scientific influence of the average article in a journal, it expresses how central to the global scientific discussion an average article of the journal is.

YearSJR
19990.424
20000.420
20010.335
20020.276
20030.284
20040.270
20050.218
20060.273
20070.273
20080.285
20090.293
20100.305
20110.335
20120.316
20130.350
20140.381
20150.383
20160.415
20170.466
20180.464
20190.473
20200.499
20210.504
20220.555
20230.542

Evolution of the number of published documents. All types of documents are considered, including citable and non citable documents.

YearDocuments
1999397
2000375
2001627
2002613
2003323
2004402
2005473
2006447
2007500
2008453
2009378
2010413
2011418
2012359
2013379
2014409
2015416
2016365
2017350
2018378
2019456
2020681
2021543
2022520
2023637

This indicator counts the number of citations received by documents from a journal and divides them by the total number of documents published in that journal. The chart shows the evolution of the average number of times documents published in a journal in the past two, three and four years have been cited in the current year. The two years line is equivalent to journal impact factor ™ (Thomson Reuters) metric.

Cites per documentYearValue
Cites / Doc. (4 years)19990.556
Cites / Doc. (4 years)20000.577
Cites / Doc. (4 years)20010.538
Cites / Doc. (4 years)20020.284
Cites / Doc. (4 years)20030.383
Cites / Doc. (4 years)20040.354
Cites / Doc. (4 years)20050.421
Cites / Doc. (4 years)20060.389
Cites / Doc. (4 years)20070.587
Cites / Doc. (4 years)20080.486
Cites / Doc. (4 years)20090.517
Cites / Doc. (4 years)20100.564
Cites / Doc. (4 years)20110.607
Cites / Doc. (4 years)20120.696
Cites / Doc. (4 years)20130.870
Cites / Doc. (4 years)20141.139
Cites / Doc. (4 years)20151.307
Cites / Doc. (4 years)20161.495
Cites / Doc. (4 years)20171.616
Cites / Doc. (4 years)20181.809
Cites / Doc. (4 years)20192.471
Cites / Doc. (4 years)20202.802
Cites / Doc. (4 years)20213.238
Cites / Doc. (4 years)20222.981
Cites / Doc. (4 years)20233.090
Cites / Doc. (3 years)19990.556
Cites / Doc. (3 years)20000.585
Cites / Doc. (3 years)20010.517
Cites / Doc. (3 years)20020.267
Cites / Doc. (3 years)20030.324
Cites / Doc. (3 years)20040.298
Cites / Doc. (3 years)20050.400
Cites / Doc. (3 years)20060.409
Cites / Doc. (3 years)20070.566
Cites / Doc. (3 years)20080.478
Cites / Doc. (3 years)20090.506
Cites / Doc. (3 years)20100.548
Cites / Doc. (3 years)20110.575
Cites / Doc. (3 years)20120.667
Cites / Doc. (3 years)20130.958
Cites / Doc. (3 years)20141.221
Cites / Doc. (3 years)20151.379
Cites / Doc. (3 years)20161.509
Cites / Doc. (3 years)20171.691
Cites / Doc. (3 years)20181.851
Cites / Doc. (3 years)20192.536
Cites / Doc. (3 years)20202.799
Cites / Doc. (3 years)20213.414
Cites / Doc. (3 years)20222.897
Cites / Doc. (3 years)20233.114
Cites / Doc. (2 years)19990.546
Cites / Doc. (2 years)20000.423
Cites / Doc. (2 years)20010.481
Cites / Doc. (2 years)20020.229
Cites / Doc. (2 years)20030.249
Cites / Doc. (2 years)20040.241
Cites / Doc. (2 years)20050.433
Cites / Doc. (2 years)20060.354
Cites / Doc. (2 years)20070.515
Cites / Doc. (2 years)20080.432
Cites / Doc. (2 years)20090.475
Cites / Doc. (2 years)20100.465
Cites / Doc. (2 years)20110.521
Cites / Doc. (2 years)20120.735
Cites / Doc. (2 years)20130.999
Cites / Doc. (2 years)20141.260
Cites / Doc. (2 years)20151.331
Cites / Doc. (2 years)20161.619
Cites / Doc. (2 years)20171.739
Cites / Doc. (2 years)20181.806
Cites / Doc. (2 years)20192.393
Cites / Doc. (2 years)20202.905
Cites / Doc. (2 years)20213.397
Cites / Doc. (2 years)20222.949
Cites / Doc. (2 years)20232.766

Evolution of the total number of citations and journal's self-citations received by a journal's published documents during the three previous years. Journal Self-citation is defined as the number of citation from a journal citing article to articles published by the same journal.

CitesYearValue
Self Cites1999278
Self Cites2000282
Self Cites2001289
Self Cites200284
Self Cites2003276
Self Cites2004263
Self Cites2005256
Self Cites2006254
Self Cites2007388
Self Cites2008323
Self Cites2009299
Self Cites2010305
Self Cites2011328
Self Cites2012347
Self Cites2013477
Self Cites2014667
Self Cites2015825
Self Cites2016823
Self Cites2017841
Self Cites2018829
Self Cites20191171
Self Cites20201716
Self Cites20212090
Self Cites20221999
Self Cites20232579
Total Cites1999547
Total Cites2000602
Total Cites2001559
Total Cites2002373
Total Cites2003523
Total Cites2004466
Total Cites2005535
Total Cites2006490
Total Cites2007748
Total Cites2008679
Total Cites2009709
Total Cites2010730
Total Cites2011715
Total Cites2012807
Total Cites20131140
Total Cites20141411
Total Cites20151582
Total Cites20161817
Total Cites20172012
Total Cites20182094
Total Cites20192772
Total Cites20203314
Total Cites20215172
Total Cites20224867
Total Cites20235431

Evolution of the number of total citation per document and external citation per document (i.e. journal self-citations removed) received by a journal's published documents during the three previous years. External citations are calculated by subtracting the number of self-citations from the total number of citations received by the journal’s documents.

CitesYearValue
External Cites per document19990.273
External Cites per document20000.311
External Cites per document20010.250
External Cites per document20020.207
External Cites per document20030.153
External Cites per document20040.130
External Cites per document20050.209
External Cites per document20060.197
External Cites per document20070.272
External Cites per document20080.251
External Cites per document20090.293
External Cites per document20100.319
External Cites per document20110.311
External Cites per document20120.380
External Cites per document20130.557
External Cites per document20140.644
External Cites per document20150.660
External Cites per document20160.826
External Cites per document20170.984
External Cites per document20181.118
External Cites per document20191.465
External Cites per document20201.350
External Cites per document20212.034
External Cites per document20221.707
External Cites per document20231.635
Cites per document19990.556
Cites per document20000.585
Cites per document20010.517
Cites per document20020.267
Cites per document20030.324
Cites per document20040.298
Cites per document20050.400
Cites per document20060.409
Cites per document20070.566
Cites per document20080.478
Cites per document20090.506
Cites per document20100.548
Cites per document20110.575
Cites per document20120.667
Cites per document20130.958
Cites per document20141.221
Cites per document20151.379
Cites per document20161.509
Cites per document20171.691
Cites per document20181.851
Cites per document20192.536
Cites per document20202.799
Cites per document20213.414
Cites per document20222.897
Cites per document20233.114

International Collaboration accounts for the articles that have been produced by researchers from several countries. The chart shows the ratio of a journal's documents signed by researchers from more than one country; that is including more than one country address.

YearInternational Collaboration
19994.53
20005.60
20013.83
20021.63
20035.88
20045.22
20055.29
20062.91
20074.00
20084.64
20094.50
20104.36
20116.46
20125.57
20137.39
20145.13
20155.29
20164.66
20176.00
20185.82
20199.65
20206.90
20217.37
20228.85
20236.75

Not every article in a journal is considered primary research and therefore "citable", this chart shows the ratio of a journal's articles including substantial research (research articles, conference papers and reviews) in three year windows vs. those documents other than research articles, reviews and conference papers.

DocumentsYearValue
Non-citable documents19991
Non-citable documents20000
Non-citable documents20010
Non-citable documents2002119
Non-citable documents2003318
Non-citable documents2004359
Non-citable documents2005292
Non-citable documents2006151
Non-citable documents2007159
Non-citable documents2008159
Non-citable documents2009165
Non-citable documents2010218
Non-citable documents2011221
Non-citable documents2012174
Non-citable documents201373
Non-citable documents201420
Non-citable documents20157
Non-citable documents20169
Non-citable documents20178
Non-citable documents20188
Non-citable documents20195
Non-citable documents20205
Non-citable documents20213
Non-citable documents20223
Non-citable documents20234
Citable documents1999983
Citable documents20001029
Citable documents20011082
Citable documents20021280
Citable documents20031297
Citable documents20041204
Citable documents20051046
Citable documents20061047
Citable documents20071163
Citable documents20081261
Citable documents20091235
Citable documents20101113
Citable documents20111023
Citable documents20121035
Citable documents20131117
Citable documents20141136
Citable documents20151140
Citable documents20161195
Citable documents20171182
Citable documents20181123
Citable documents20191088
Citable documents20201179
Citable documents20211512
Citable documents20221677
Citable documents20231740

Ratio of a journal's items, grouped in three years windows, that have been cited at least once vs. those not cited during the following year.

DocumentsYearValue
Uncited documents1999678
Uncited documents2000709
Uncited documents2001721
Uncited documents20021154
Uncited documents20031256
Uncited documents20041248
Uncited documents2005993
Uncited documents2006890
Uncited documents2007869
Uncited documents20081026
Uncited documents2009998
Uncited documents2010901
Uncited documents2011830
Uncited documents2012741
Uncited documents2013626
Uncited documents2014525
Uncited documents2015464
Uncited documents2016486
Uncited documents2017446
Uncited documents2018394
Uncited documents2019318
Uncited documents2020308
Uncited documents2021334
Uncited documents2022413
Uncited documents2023323
Cited documents1999306
Cited documents2000320
Cited documents2001361
Cited documents2002245
Cited documents2003359
Cited documents2004315
Cited documents2005345
Cited documents2006308
Cited documents2007453
Cited documents2008394
Cited documents2009402
Cited documents2010430
Cited documents2011414
Cited documents2012468
Cited documents2013564
Cited documents2014631
Cited documents2015683
Cited documents2016718
Cited documents2017744
Cited documents2018737
Cited documents2019775
Cited documents2020876
Cited documents20211181
Cited documents20221267
Cited documents20231421

Evolution of the percentage of female authors.

YearFemale Percent
199930.66
200026.81
200128.83
200231.52
200333.20
200432.56
200531.62
200633.52
200732.93
200833.83
200940.32
201038.06
201136.90
201235.54
201337.71
201438.23
201540.52
201640.32
201740.68
201840.43
201943.44
202042.60
202144.01
202247.21
202346.40

Evolution of the number of documents cited by public policy documents according to Overton database.

DocumentsYearValue
Overton199910
Overton20008
Overton20016
Overton20020
Overton20033
Overton20049
Overton20052
Overton20064
Overton20076
Overton20087
Overton20092
Overton20107
Overton20115
Overton20125
Overton20136
Overton20149
Overton201511
Overton20166
Overton20175
Overton201811
Overton201917
Overton202012
Overton20215
Overton20221
Overton20230

Evoution of the number of documents related to Sustainable Development Goals defined by United Nations. Available from 2018 onwards.

DocumentsYearValue
SDG201864
SDG2019100
SDG2020257
SDG2021167
SDG2022204
SDG2023183

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JCE 98.03 March 2021 Issue Highlights

Journal of Chemical Education March 2021 Cover

Journal of Chemical Education March 2021 Issue

The March 2021 issue of the Journal of Chemical Education is now available online to subscribers. Topics featured in this issue include: lunar exploration and the chemistry classroom; teaching and learning remotely; experiments with color and natural products; materials science; introductory computational chemistry; guided inquiry activities; demonstrations and apparatus; teaching organic chemistry; biochemistry; chemical education research: introductory chemistry; from the archives: choose your own adventure and chemical escape rooms.

Cover: Lunar Exploration and the Chemistry Classroom

With resurgent lunar exploration and expansion of the commercial space sector, serious scholarship, planning, and resources have focused on extracting and using lunar materials to sustain activity in space. In Lunar Resource Harvesting and Manufacturing: Rich Content for the Chemistry Classroom , Joshua D. Kittle, Michael W. Duff, and John M. Engesser use this engaging, interdisciplinary, space-oriented topic to excite and inspire chemistry students, while reinforcing general chemistry concepts. (Image of moon courtesy of NASA. Image from NASA Moon Mineralogy Mapper showing water detected at high latitudes courtesy of ISRO/NASA/JPL-Caltech/Brown Univ./USGS.)

Other space-related content in this issue includes:

Low-Cost, Balle-Flygare-Type Cavity Fourier Transform Microwave Spectrometer and Pure Rotational Spectroscopy Laboratory for Teaching Physical Chemistry and Astronomy ~ Amanda Duerden, Nicole Moon, and G. S. Grubbs

In the editorial What Is Laying the Groundwork Today for the Next Big Education Revolution? , Tom Holme considers what basic research efforts of today are laying the groundwork for major advances in teaching and learning in the next 20 years and speculates about the Human Connectome Project and its mapping of brain structures and functions. (Available open access without a subscription.)

Teaching and Learning Remotely

The Chemical Kitchen: Toward Remote Delivery of an Interdisciplinary Practical Course ~ Jakub L. Radzikowski, Luke C. Delmas, Alan C. Spivey, Jozef Youssef, and Roger Kneebone (ACS AuthorChoice: available open access without a subscription)

Overcoming the Challenges of Remote Instruction: Using Mobile Technology to Promote Active Learning ~ Brandi L. Baldock, Anthony L. Fernandez, Jimmy Franco, Brian A. Provencher, and Mark R. McCoy

From Passive Observers to Active Participants: Using Interactive Remote Demonstrations to Increase Student Involvement in Online Chemistry Instruction ~ Daniel R. Zuidema and Robert H. Zuidema

Synchronous Online-Delivery: A Novel Approach to Online Lab Instruction ~ Elizabeth V. Jones, Carrie G. Shepler, and Michael J. Evans

Analysis of Amylase in the Kitchen: An At-Home Biochemistry Experiment for the COVID-19 Pandemic ~ Sehrish Maqsood, Samuel M. Kilpatrick, Chloe D. Truong, and Scott R. Lefler

Benefits and Challenges of a Virtual Laboratory in Chemical and Biochemical Engineering: Students’ Experiences in Fermentation ~ Simoneta Caño de las Heras, Barbara Kensington-Miller, Brent Young, Vicente Gonzalez, Ulrich Krühne, Seyed Soheil Mansouri, and Saeid Baroutian

Augmented Titration Setup for Future Teaching Laboratories ~ Fan Yang, Veronica Lai, Kea Legard, Stephanie Kozdras, Paloma L. Prieto, Shad Grunert, and Jason E. Hein

At-Home Real-Life Sample Preparation and Colorimetric-Based Analysis: A Practical Experience outside the Laboratory ~ Samer Doughan and Anna Shahmuradyan

Titrate over the Internet: An Open-Source Remote-Control Titration Unit for All Students ~ Ronald Soong, Amy Jenne, Daniel H. Lysak, Rajshree Ghosh Biswas, Antonio Adamo, Kris S. Kim, and Andre Simpson

For additional ideas related to teaching during COVID, see the September 2020 issue, a special issue devoted to “Insights Gained While Teaching Chemistry in the Time of COVID-19 ”.

Experiments with Color and Natural Products

Separation of Food Colorings via Liquid–Liquid Extraction: An At-Home Organic Chemistry Lab  ~ Brandon J. Orzolek and Marisa C. Kozlowski

Turmeric and RGB Analysis: A Low-Cost Experiment for Teaching Acid–Base Equilibria at Home ~ Rolando M. Caraballo, Leila M. Saleh Medina, Sergio G. J. Gomez, Priscila Vensaus, and Mariana Hamer

Identification of Synthetic Organic Pigments in Contemporary Artists’ Paints by FT-IR and FT-Raman: An Advanced Analytical Experimen t ~ Margherita Longoni and Silvia Bruni

Identification of Tree Species by Their Defense Compounds: A Study with Leaf Buds of White and Silver Birches ~ Marianna Manninen, Veli-Matti Vesterinen, Anna-Kaisa Vainio, Heidi Korhonen, Maarit Karonen, and Juha-Pekka Salminen (ACS AuthorChoice: available open access without a subscription)

Materials Science

Cu Plating with Sn and Subsequent Bronze Formation under Mild Conditions  ~ Takahiro Suzuki and Masayuki Inoue. (This experiment is explored further at ChemEdX by Tom Kuntzleman in Plating Pennies with Tin .)

Design of a Guided Inquiry Classroom Activity to Investigate Effects of Chemistry on Physical Properties of Elastomers ~ Alexander H. Greer, William Vauclain, Elijah Lee, Aidan Lowe, Jared Hoefner, Nikhil Chakraborty, Michael Fairorth, Neetish Sharma, Thomas Russell, Robert Esgro, Lisa Snyder, and Holly M. Golecki

Categorization of Quantum Dots, Clusters, Nanoclusters, and Nanodots ~ Hyung Jun Park, Dong Jun Shin, and Junhua Yu (open access without a subscription)

Upper-Year Materials Chemistry Computational Modeling Module for Organic Display Technologies ~ Gabrielle C. Hoover, Andrew P. Dicks, and Dwight S. Seferos

Motivating and Supporting Undergraduate Research through Green Chemistry: Experiences at a Small Liberal Arts University ~ Jared VanderZwaag, Hechao Du, and Liza Abraham

Introductory Computational Chemistry

Introducing High School Students to the Avogadro Number and the Mole Concept Using Discovery with Calculations Based on Physical Properties of Elements, Crystal Structures, and 28Si Spheres ~ Thomas H. Bindel

Connecting Chemistry to Mathematics by Establishing the Relationship between Conductivity and Concentration in an Interdisciplinary, Computer-Based Project for High School Chemistry Students ~ Hao Shang

Guided Inquiry Activities

Using Pop-Culture to Engage Students in the Classroom ~ Nicolas Dietrich, Mélanie Jimenez, Manuel Souto, Aaron W. Harrison, Christophe Coudret, and Eric Olmos

Chemical Battleship: Discovering and Learning the Periodic Table Playing a Didactic and Strategic Board Game ~ Jose M. Montejo Bernardo and Alfonso Fernández González

A Choose-Your-Own-Adventure-Style Virtual Lab Activity ~ Lauren A. Warning and Krista Kobylianskii

Guided Inquiry Activity for Teaching Titration Through Total Titratable Acidity in a General Chemistry Laboratory Course ~ John C. Goeltz and Lia A. Cuevas

Work-Integrated Learning: A Game-Based Learning Activity That Enhances Student Employability ~ Fiona Ponikwer and Bhavik Anil Patel (ACS Editors’ Choice: available open access without a subscription for a limited period)

Thinking-Based Learning at Higher Education Levels: Implementation and Outcomes within a Chemical Engineering Class ~ José S. Torrecilla, Belén Gutiérrez-de-Rozas, and John C. Cancilla

Demonstrations and Apparatus

Demonstration of the Influence of Specific Surface Area on Reaction Rate in Heterogeneous Catalysis ~ Paweł Bernard, Paweł Stelmachowski, Paweł Broś, Wacław Makowski, and Andrzej Kotarba (ACS AuthorChoice: available open access without a subscription)

Hydrolysis of 2-Chloro-2-methylpropane—Demonstration Using the Quenching of Fluorescence from Fluorescein ~ Masatada Matsuoka and Takashiro Akitsu

Optimized and Refined Apparatus for Measuring Surface Tension with the Bubble-Pressure Method ~ Yunshan Bai, Guoling Li, Lei Li, Kewang Wang, Shirong Li, and Huanhuan Liu

Teaching Organic Chemistry 

In the Laboratory

Integrating iSpartan into a Classic Organic Chemistry Laboratory Experiment ~ Shanina Sanders Johnson, Leyte Winfield, and Shannon H. Sung

Synthesis of 1-Phenylthiourea: An Undergraduate Organic Chemistry Experiment Illustrating Carbonyl Transformations ~ Itamar Luís Gonçalves, Leonardo Davi, Fernando Cidade Torres, Rômulo Faria Santos Canto, and Vera Lucia Eifler-Lima

Drug Synthesis and Analysis of an Acetylcholinesterase Inhibitor: A Comprehensive Medicinal Chemistry Experience for Undergraduates ~ Jie Yang, Yi Yuan, Jing Gu, Ao Li, Zhao Wei, and Qin Ouyang

Buchwald–Hartwig Amination, High-Throughput Experimentation, and Process Chemistry: An Introduction via Undergraduate Laboratory Experimentation ~ Bailee Wathen, Emily Lanehart, Lena A. Woodis, and Anthony J. Rojas

In the Classroom

MILAGE LEARN+: A Mobile Learning App to Aid the Students in the Study of Organic Chemistry ~ Custódia S. C. Fonseca, Marielba Zacarias, and Mauro Figueiredo

Using 3D Printing to Visualize 2D Chromatograms and NMR Spectra for the Classroom ~ Oliver A. H. Jones, Paul G. Stevenson, Simone C. Hameka, Dale A. Osborne, Patrick D. Taylor, and Michelle J. S. Spencer

Explanation of Substituent Effects on the Enolization of β-Diketones and β-Ketoesters ~ Isolde Sandler, Jason B. Harper, and Junming Ho

School-Related Content Knowledge in Organic Chemistry—How Does the Students’ Rating of Their Perceived Relevance of Tasks Differ between Bachelor and Master Studies? ~ Jolanda Hermanns and David Keller

Biochemistry

Reporting Biochemistry to the General Public through a Science Communication Writing Assignment ~ Nicholas F. Garza, Solaire A. Finkenstaedt-Quinn, Catherine A. Wilhelm, Kristin S. Koutmou, and Ginger V. Shultz

Protein Identification by Database Searching of Mass Spectrometry Data in the Teaching of Proteomics ~ Vinícius Marquioni, Francis Morais Franco Nunes, and Maria Teresa Marques Novo-Mansur

Analysis of Protonation Equilibria of Amino Acids in Aqueous Solutions Using Microsoft Excel ~ Bojan Šarac and San Hadži (ACS AuthorChoice: available open access without a subscription)

Enzyme Free Energy Diagrams: Enzyme–Substrate Binding Is Always Spontaneous ~ Todd P. Silverstein

Chemical Education Research: Introductory Chemistry

From Ideas to Items: A Primer on the Development of Ordered Multiple-Choice Items for Investigating the Progression of Learning in Higher Education STEM ~ Katherine Lazenby, Morgan E. Balabanoff, Nicole M. Becker, Alena Moon, and Jack Barbera

Use of Simulations and Screencasts to Increase Student Understanding of Energy Concepts in Bonding ~ Jessica R. VandenPlas, Deborah G. Herrington, Alec D. Shrode, and Ryan D. Sweeder

Let Students Choose: Examining the Impact of Open Educational Resources on Performance in General Chemistry ~ Rebecca L. Sansom, Virginia Clinton-Lisell, and Lane Fischer 

Effectiveness of Inquiry Based Laboratory Instruction on Developing Secondary Students’ Views on Scientific Inquiry ~ Pinar Seda Cetin

From the Archives: Choose Your Own Adventure and Chemical Escape Rooms

In the March issue, Lauren A. Warning and Krista Kobylianskii describe A Choose-Your-Own-Adventure-Style Virtual Lab Activity to provide an online alternative for a laboratory activity. A choose-your-own-adventure activity as well as chemical escape rooms have been discussed in past articles including: 

Choose Your Own “Labventure”: A Click-Through Story Approach to Online Laboratories during a Global Pandemic ~ John G. D’Angelo

Escape the (Remote) Classroom: An Online Escape Room for Remote Learning ~ Matthew J. Vergne, J. Dominic Smith, and Ryan S. Bowen

Physical and Digital Educational Escape Room for Teaching Chemical Bonding ~ Jayden Wei Jie Ang, Yin Ni Annie Ng, and Rou Shen Liew

A Lab-Based Chemical Escape Room: Educational, Mobile, and Fun! ~ Ran Peleg, Malka Yayon, Dvora Katchevich, Mor Moria-Shipony, and Ron Blonder

Escape the Lab: An Interactive Escape-Room Game as a Laboratory Experiment ~ Matthew J. Vergne, Joshua D. Simmons, and Ryan S. Bowen

Escaping Boredom in First Semester General Chemistry ~ David Watermeier and Bridget Salzameda

Do-It-Yourself: Creating and Implementing a Periodic Table of the Elements Chemical Escape Room ~ Malka Yayon, Shelley Rap, Vered Adler, Inbar Haimovich, Hagit Levy, and Ron Blonder

Escape Classroom: The Leblanc Process—An Educational “Escape Game” ~ Nicolas Dietrich

Using Augmented Reality to Stimulate Students and Diffuse Escape Game Activities to Larger Audiences ~ Anabela Estudante and Nicolas Dietrich

ChemEscape, Polymer Chemistry: Solving Interactive Puzzles Featuring Scaffolded Learning to Promote Student Understanding of Polymers and Structure–Property Relationships ~ Brian C. T. Gilbert, Marissa L. Clapson, and Amanda Musgrove

Escape ClassRoom: Can You Solve a Crime Using the Analytical Process? ~ Marta Ferreiro-González, Antonio Amores-Arrocha, Estrella Espada-Bellido, María José Aliaño-Gonzalez, Mercedes Vázquez-Espinosa, Ana V. González-de-Peredo, Pau Sancho-Galán, José Ángel Álvarez-Saura, Gerardo F. Barbero, and Cristina Cejudo-Bastante

Erica Jacobsen discussed bringing the popular genre of “escape rooms” into the chemistry classroom on ChemEdX in Especially JCE: May 2019 .

Readers and Authors of JCE Are Out of this World

Even in these times of disruption, there are always ideas for teaching and learning chemistry available in the Journal of Chemical Education —including the March 2021 issue described above. Articles that are edited and published online ahead of print ( ASAP—As Soon As Publishable ) are also available. (For more information on how to access the  articles cited above, see Deanna Cullen’s post on Accessing Cited Articles .)

Do you have something to share? Write it up for the Journal! In particular, consider submitting to the special issue of JCE on Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Respect in Chemistry Education Research and Practice (deadline is April 12, 2021). Additional information about this special issue is available in this issue . 

Erica Jacobsen’s Commentary  (available without a subscription) continues to provide excellent advice about becoming an author. In addition, numerous author resources are available on JCE’s ACS website , including the revised Author Guidelines and Document Templates . The ACS Publishing Center also has resources for preparing and reviewing manuscripts for ACS journals. 

  • ACS Publications

ACS Researcher Resources

Author guidelines.

journal of chemical education

Last updated: June 25, 2024

Manuscript Submission Requirements Checklists

Scope of the journal, manuscript types, submit with fast format, document templates and format, acceptable software, file designations, and tex/latex, cover letter, manuscript text components, supporting information, research data policy, data requirements, language and editing services, preparing graphics, figure and illustration services, prior publication policy, editorial policies, providing potential reviewer names, manuscript transfer, proofs via acs direct correct, publication date and patent dates, asap publication, post-publication policies, sharing your published article.

These checklists aid in confirming that a submission is complete, which facilitates the peer-review and editorial process and increases the likelihood of a successful outcome. Incomplete or noncompliant submissions are returned to authors.

Content Expectations

  • The content of the manuscript clearly demonstrates relevance to the teaching and learning of chemistry, and the audience is clearly defined.
  • The various manuscript types have been reviewed and the appropriate type selected. The submitted manuscript is of appropriate length and includes all components pertaining to the selected manuscript type. Articles that are to be reviewed as Chemical Education Research should follow the Content Requirements for Chemical Education Research Manuscripts .
  • A thorough literature review has been conducted in order to place the submission within the context of previously published work, especially with respect to the chemical education literature.

ACS Paragon Plus Submission Requirements

  • All files are current and supportable  and have been properly designated by file type  within ACS Paragon Plus.
  • Within ACS Paragon Plus, the Custom Questions have been answered, including those about conflict of interest, unpublished work, and previous submissions.
  • The ACS Ethical Guidelines  have been read and are understood.
  • The abstract field in ACS Paragon Plus has been filled in; no citations or display elements are included in the abstract text.
  • The authors’ names in ACS Paragon Plus match those in the manuscript file.
  • The required cover letter, addressed to the Editor-in-Chief, describes the relevance of the work and intended audience.

Manuscript File

  • The author guidelines have been reviewed, and the document template  has been used. Using the document template helps ensure that necessary components are included; templates for display elements (figures and structures) are also available.
  • All markup elements within files such as tracked changes, comments, and highlights have been removed and the track changes feature has been turned off.
  • Language and usage are standard. (Authors may wish to improve the language in the manuscript by consulting an English editing service .)
  • The manuscript includes an appropriate, descriptive title; names of authors, affiliations, and the corresponding author’s e-mail address; approx. 5-8 keywords; and an abstract.
  • A graphical abstract providing a “quick visual representation” of the paper has been provided (if desired) and is original work differentiated from other figures.
  • Appropriate headings and subheadings have been included to indicate the overall structure and progression of ideas of the manuscript.
  • Citations and references are complete, including article titles and use of DOIs. Previously published material has been cited and has not been excessively used.
  • Unpublished work that has been cited has been uploaded for editorial review.

Display Elements

  • Display elements appear after their mention in the text and are comprehensible without regard to the text.
  • Display elements are numbered sequentially, are correctly designated (e.g., figure, table, equation, scheme, box) in the text, and are appropriately captioned or titled.
  • Specifications for display elements have been reviewed and followed.
  • Tables include appropriate titles, column headings, and notes; use table footnotes rather than annotating cell entries or table titles to convey details. Tables should be constructed using the table tool or function.
  • Permission has been obtained for display elements that have been reproduced or adapted from other sources. Appropriate credit lines have been incorporated into captions, and documentation pertaining to permissions has been uploaded.
  • Supporting Information for Publication has been provided separately from the main text and is discussed in the main text, and the contents of each file have been listed and file format(s) designated under an “Associated Content” section in the manuscript (see the document template ). Supporting Information is required for Laboratory Experiment, Activity, and Demonstration manuscripts; provide these materials in an editable format (e.g., a Word file) so that those adopting the lab or activity can adapt them. Supporting Information is optional for the other manuscript types. If the track changes feature was used, ensure that all changes are accepted and comments resolved, and that the track changes feature is off.
  • No parts of the main manuscript are duplicated in the Supporting Information.
  • The Supporting Information is original material produced by the authors for the purposes of J CE and has not been previously published elsewhere.

Permissions and Copyright

  • It is understood that the American Chemical Society has strict policies regarding the use of material from other sources and that “fair use” is not considered to be a sufficient criterion. Material from Wikipedia, Flickr, or similar websites containing material with non-commercial Creative Commons licenses is not acceptable.
  • Permissions have been obtained from copyright holders (including those that provide freely available content) to reproduce material not originated by the authors. Such material includes photographs, illustrations, screenshots, images of instrumentation, and materials produced by students. Documentation has been uploaded in ACS Paragon Plus.
  • Model releases have been signed by people who are identifiable in photographs (including authors). Releases have been uploaded in ACS Paragon Plus.
  • Trademarked product names (whether in images or in the text) have been replaced by descriptive generic names where possible.
  • Logos, brand names, trademarks, and company images in screenshots, photographs, and spectra have been obscured by blurring, cropping, or masking.
  • Necessary credit lines are included in figure captions and table or box notes.
  • Informed consent (and institutional review board [IRB] approval, if applicable) has been obtained for studies involving human subjects , and the manuscript indicates that such consent and approval has been obtained. If student work is used, documentation indicating that students have granted their consent has been provided.

The Journal of Chemical Education   (JCE) is co-published by the ACS Division of Chemical Education and the American Chemical Society Publications division. Launched in 1924, JCE is the world’s premier chemical education journal. JCE is published online and in print and has electronic archival content available from 1924 (Vol. 1) to the present.

The Journal of Chemical Education publishes peer-reviewed articles and related information as a resource to those in the field of chemical education and to those institutions that serve them. The journal typically addresses chemical content, laboratory experiments, instructional methods, and pedagogies. JCE serves as a means of communication among people across the world who are interested in the teaching and learning of chemistry. The global audience includes instructors of chemistry from middle school through graduate school, professional staff who support these teaching activities, as well as some scientists in commerce, industry, and government.

The criteria for a publishable manuscript include these areas of evaluation: scholarship, novelty, pedagogy, utility, and presentation. To be considered for publication by the Journal of Chemical Education , a manuscript must:

  • Demonstrate scientific and scholarly rigor, supported by up-to-date citations to relevant literature and guided by a rationale for how the work fits into existing knowledge.
  • Exhibit novelty through original scholarship or a creative or innovative practice.
  • Have pedagogical content and educational relevance and insight that demonstrate a positive impact on teaching and learning while articulating audience level, use with students, and details for adopting and adapting the material, if applicable.
  • Be useful to JCE readers by showing a connection to teaching and learning within the context of curricula or coursework.
  • Present well-developed ideas in a comprehensive, organized discussion written in clear, concise English and making effective use of display elements (figures, schemes, tables, etc.).
  • Adhere to the requirements and JCE protocols outlined in this document for each respective manuscript type and be submitted according to ACS publishing policies.
  • Be submitted electronically using ACS Paragon Plus

JCE does not publish science research papers (or papers exclusively covering scientific content) unless they have a direct link to the teaching and learning of chemistry.

JCE publishes a wide variety of scholarly content categorized by manuscript type. All manuscripts must be designated as a particular type upon submission. Word counts associated with each manuscript type are a recommended word limit; these word counts exclude display elements, manuscript references, and Supporting Information, which is material published separately only online.

An Activity (3000 words) describes a hands-on activity at any level (from elementary through the university level) that can be done in the classroom or laboratory or in an informal setting. Activities are intended to introduce engaging and thought-provoking ideas or topics and to spark discussion. They need to have been done with students in a teaching or outreach setting and to have been evaluated and used several times in order to substantiate claims of success. They should not be proposals.

The ways in which the activity has been implemented in the context of a curriculum should be described. Details such as the total number of students who completed the activity, how long it took students to complete the activity, and whether they worked individually or in groups should be included, as should student results. The range of student results should be stated in addition to typical student results (an average value). Problems that instructors might encounter should be mentioned, and other information that would assist an instructor with implementing the activity should be provided. There should also be an assessment of how the activity improved the learning process of students. Any potential hazards and safety precautions must be addressed in a dedicated Hazards section in the manuscript.

Supporting Information to aid in the use of the activity by others is required—for example, notes for instructors (including sources for materials used) and actual student handouts. Materials used should be inexpensive, nonhazardous, and readily available.

Permissions and documentation are required in order to reproduce material created by students. (See Use of Student Work section.)

An Article (5000 words) describes a novel educational idea or approach, content for the classroom or laboratory, pedagogical advance, or educational research. Invited Articles may review a broad topic area that has wide applicability. Articles can target specific constituencies (i.e., precollege or introductory or advanced college students), address a specific content area, describe a new pedagogy or teaching method, or provide results on an innovation or chemical education research study.

Chemical Education Research

Articles specific to reporting the research pertaining to teaching and learning chemistry (chemical education research, CER) should be identified as such in the cover letter. CER manuscripts must be written and will be reviewed using the Specific Content Requirements for Chemical Education Research Manuscripts . Because of these requirements for CER manuscripts, the recommended word limit for this category of article is 7000.

Scholarly discussions of a topic of interest to the chemical education community that include the opinions of the author(s) are published using the manuscript type Commentary (2,000 words or as agreed to by the editorial office). The manuscript should provide sufficient information for readers to understand the topic or formulate their own opinions.

Communication

Communications (3000 words) generally update or extend topics addressed in manuscripts that have already been published. The ways in which the update is interesting, useful, and novel should be made clear. Manuscripts of this type are not intended as precursors to Articles. For Communications pertaining to laboratory experiments and activities, the focus should be on student experiences and student results with regard to the update. The details of the lab or activity must be included in the Supporting Information, as should materials that have been used with students.

Demonstration

A description, explanation, and procedure for an actual or virtual demonstration for teaching chemistry concepts, Demonstrations (3000 words) must reflect best practices related to safety (i.e., handling and storage of chemicals) and to hazards (i.e., fires, explosions, noxious fumes), as well as provide complete information that will enable others to use the demonstration in their settings. Hazards and safety precautions must be addressed in a dedicated Hazards section. Providing Supporting Information is required; including a video of the demonstration as Supporting Information is encouraged.

Editorials (1000 words) are opinion pieces by the Editor-in-Chief, an Associate Editor, or a guest writer invited by the Editor-in-Chief.

Laboratory Experiment

Laboratory Experiment (4000 words) manuscripts are intended to help readers visualize their students performing an experiment. Thus, labs are expected to have been done by students as part of an actual laboratory course or learning experience and to have been evaluated and used several times in order to substantiate claims of success. They should not be proposals. Labs should be novel and placed within the context of similar experiments that have been published. The pedagogical effectiveness of the reported experiment must be made clear.

Information about how the experiment was conducted with students should be provided, including the number of students who participated, whether the students worked individually or in groups, the number of times the experiment was run, and the time it took to complete the experiment. The focus should not be on procedures; rather, procedures should be summarized and details provided in the Supporting Information. Hazards and safety precautions must be addressed in a dedicated Hazards section in the manuscript.

There should also be an assessment of how the experiment improved the learning process of students and whether the pedagogical goals were achieved. Typical assessments include exam questions, pre- and postlab quizzes, assignments, and laboratory reports. If laboratory reports are used for assessment of achieving the pedagogical goals for an experiment, authors should state what specific information in the lab reports was used to assess achievement of each of the pedagogical goals, and how well students did on those aspects of the reports. Student surveys are not considered adequate tools. Limitations of the experiment (e.g., the use of expensive or uncommon equipment or professionally fabricated materials) should be noted as an indication of whether it can be used in certain settings.

Supporting Information must accompany the manuscript; it should contain material that a reader would find necessary to set up, adapt, and carry out the lab in a particular instructional environment. Materials such as student handouts, instructor notes, detailed procedures, safety information, CAS numbers, pre- and postlab assessments, and data (representative student data; “idealized” author data are optional) are particularly useful. Student handouts and instructor notes should be placed in separate files. It is appropriate to mention developmental work in instructor notes. An editable version of the Supporting Information (i.e., Word document) should be provided; this format is convenient for instructors who adapt or modify the lab.

For experiments involving recombinant DNA work, authors should consult their institutional biosafety committees (IBCs) for the biosafety level (i.e., BSL-1, BSL-2, BSL-3) of the work in the experiment; for student experiments it will probably be BSL-1, but authors should confirm this with the IBC and register the experiment with the committee. For experiments involving study subject animals, please see the ACS Ethical Guidelines .

Letter to the Editor

A manuscript type that allows readers to respond to a piece that has been published in JCE , Letter to the Editor (1000 words) should contribute to or elicit discussion on a subject without overstepping the bounds of professional courtesy. The author(s) of the publication referred to may be invited to submit a reply. Letter to the Editor will typically be peer-reviewed.

Technology Report

A Technology Report (3000 words) provides a scholarly description of a website, software application, media item, or other use of technology that enhances teaching and learning. The technology described should have been used with students and the results reported. The manuscript text describes the item and its intended use with students and provides the URL for Web-based resources, as appropriate. For all other applications described, the file related to the described technology should be included as Supporting Information for publication (e.g., Excel worksheet, Flash animation, specific application codes, scripts, Mathematica program file).

While this document will provide basic information on how to prepare and submit the manuscript as well as other critical information about publishing, we also encourage authors to visit the ACS Researcher Resources for additional information on everything that is needed to prepare (and review) manuscripts for ACS journals and partner journals, such as

  • Mastering the Art of Scientific Publication , which shares editor tips about a variety of topics including making your paper scientifically effective, preparing excellent graphics, and writing cover letters.
  • Resources on how to prepare and submit a manuscript to ACS Paragon Plus, ACS Publications’ manuscript submission and peer review environment, including details on selecting the applicable Journal Publishing Agreement .
  • Sharing your research with the public through the ACS Publications open access program.
  • ACS Reviewer Lab , a free online course covering best practices for peer review and related ethical considerations. 
  • ACS Author Lab , a free online course that empowers authors to prepare and submit strong manuscripts, avoiding errors that could lead to delays in the publication process.
  • ACS Inclusivity Style Guide , a guide that helps researchers communicate in ways that recognize and respect diversity in all its forms.

Manuscript Preparation

All ACS journals and partner journals have simplified their formatting requirements in favor of a streamlined and standardized format for an initial manuscript submission. Read more about the requirements and the benefits these serves authors and reviewers here .

Manuscripts submitted for initial consideration must adhere to these standards:

  • Submissions must be complete with clearly identified standard sections used to report original research, free of annotations or highlights, and include all numbered and labeled components.
  • Figures, charts, tables, schemes, and equations should be embedded in the text at the point of relevance. Separate graphics can be supplied later at revision, if necessary.
  • When required by a journal's structure or length limitations, manuscript templates should be used.
  • References can be provided in any style, but they must be complete, including titles. For information about the required components of different reference types, please refer to the  ACS Style Quick Guide .
  • Supporting Information must be submitted as a separate file(s).

The templates facilitate the peer review process by allowing authors to place artwork and tables close to the point where they are discussed within the text. Learn more about document templates here . 

General information on the preparation of manuscripts may also be found in the ACS Guide to Scholarly Communication .

See the list of Acceptable Software and appropriate File Designations to be sure your file types are compatible with ACS Paragon Plus. Information for manuscripts generated from TeX/LaTeX is also available.

A cover letter must accompany every manuscript submission. During the submission process, you may type it or paste it into the submission system, or you may attach it as a file.

A cover letter for the attention of the Editor-in-Chief describing the relevance of the submission and intended audience should be provided. Any previous manuscript identification numbers should be referenced, and any changes that have been made to the manuscript should be summarized in the cover letter.

The title should clearly and concisely reflect the emphasis and content of the manuscript and be accessible to a broad audience. The title should not contain esoteric terms, symbols, trademark names, institution names, abbreviations, or uncommon acronyms, and part or series numbers. Proscribed terms include “new”, “first”, and “green”. Indicate the audience and the setting if that is significant. A well- crafted title aids in successful information retrieval.

Author List

Include all those who made substantial contributions to the work and to the preparation of the manuscript. To facilitate indexing and retrieval and for unique identification of an author, use given (first) names, initials, and surnames (e.g., John R. Smith) or first initials, second names, and surnames (e.g., J. Robert Smith). Because all author names are automatically imported into the electronic Journal Publishing Agreement, all author names must be entered into ACS Paragon Plus. Do not use only initials with surnames (e.g., J. R. Smith), as this causes indexing and retrieval difficulties and interferes with unique identification of an author.

One author must be designated as the person to whom correspondence should be addressed, indicated by an asterisk after that author’s surname and inclusion of an e-mail address in the manuscript file. The corresponding author is responsible for ensuring that all authors have approved the manuscript before submission and for all subsequent revisions.

Note that all authors listed should have made significant and substantial intellectual contributions to the work. Students should not be listed as coauthors unless their authorship meets the criteria outlined in the ACS Ethical Guidelines : see section B(11) for further details. Students may be recognized in the Acknowledgments section for their contributions.

Author Affiliation

For each author, include an institutional affiliation (department or unit and address) where the work was done. If the present affiliation of an author differs from the one at which the work was done, the new affiliation and address should be given in an author information note at the end of the manuscript file. Authors should ensure that the information in their ACS Paragon Plus account is up to date.

Institution Identification

Many funders and institutions require that institutional affiliations are identified for all authors listed in the work being submitted. ACS facilitates this requirement by collecting institution information during manuscript submission under Step 2: Authors and Affiliations in ACS Paragon Plus.

The abstract (approximately 250 words or fewer) should summarize the important points made in the manuscript. Include the abstract text in the manuscript file. No cited literature or display elements should appear in the abstract. A well-written abstract aids in successful information retrieval and is the first aspect of a submission that will be reviewed.

Keyword Terms

Provide significant keywords to aid the reader in literature retrieval. Please consider the use of words different from those in the title to expand the discoverability of the article. The keywords are published immediately before the text, following the abstract. Note that the keyword term “Chemical Education Research” is reserved for manuscripts that are intended for review using the specific criteria for CER described online .

Manuscript content should adhere to the criteria for the manuscript type selected. The Journal expects that manuscripts will be written in literate, grammatically correct, scientific English; the absence of these qualities inhibits and detracts from the effectiveness of the review and evaluation process and may lead to substantial delays. An informal tone and overuse of first-person pronouns, especially used as adjectives or possessives (e.g., “my”, “mine”, “our”, “ours”) and second-person pronouns (e.g., “you”, “your”) should be avoided.

Text should be presented in one column with numbered pages, and organized using headings and subheadings (without numbers, references, or acronyms in the headings). Abbreviations and acronyms should be used sparingly and should be defined at their first occurrence. Other than headings, present the text in black.

Whenever possible, use systematic nomenclature as recommended by IUPAC for chemical compounds and SI units, including in table column headings. (See the IUPAC “color books” , which include nomenclature and terminology guides.) Present analyzed data in an accurate, complete, yet concise manner. Express results with indications of their reliability. This includes appropriate use of significant figures, as well as statistical parameters (e.g., standard deviation, p-values indicating statistical significance, and measures of effect size). Terms, variables, and symbols should be defined within the text (rather than in a list of abbreviations). The Journal does not publish appendices. Such material should be removed from the main text of the manuscript and uploaded as separate Supporting Information. Authors must emphasize any unexpected, new, and/or significant hazards or risks associated with the reported work. This information should be in a separate Hazards section.

Hazards and Safety Precautions

Any manuscript type should contain a Hazards section if it describes the use of or exposure to hazardous chemicals or the use of equipment or procedures that present health or safety risks. A Hazards section is required in Demonstration and Laboratory Experiment manuscript types and in Communication manuscripts if they pertain to these manuscript types. Hazards and safety precautions relating to the handling or use of chemicals or the manipulation of materials or equipment must be completely and clearly described in this section.

Authors describing laboratory procedures, activities, and demonstrations are urged to consult the following resources to determine the appropriate and accepted standards for chemical laboratory safety practice:

  • Prudent Practices in the Laboratory: Handling and Management of Chemical Hazards, Updated Version ,  from the National Research Council details standards for chemical laboratory safety practice.
  • The ACS Center for Lab Safety hosts many resources including a laboratory safety resource specifically written for secondary schools and one written specifically for academic institutions from two-year colleges through graduate school.
  • Safety Guidelines for Chemical Demonstrations from the ACS Division of Chemical Education outlines current best practices with a checklist of key issues for demonstrators.

The Journal does not publish manuscripts that involve the use of domestic (i.e., kitchen) microwave ovens because such use is potentially hazardous and poses safety concerns. The Journal also does not publish manuscripts in which authors describe the use of or exposure to chemicals known to be toxic, such as n -hexane, benzene, and others, unless the author presents a convincing case that such use or exposure does not pose a risk to health and safety.

In manuscripts that discuss procedures in which products are formed, the author must provide hazard and safety information about these compounds, inasmuch as in some cases they may be more hazardous than the reactants. If the hazards of the products of a reaction are not known, the author should state the hazards or safety concerns that might be assumed.

Display elements (figures, tables, equations, schemes, boxes, charts, structures, and reactions) should be self-explanatory, that is, understandable independent of the text. They must be created using the appropriate tool (e.g., the table tool, equation editor for equations, ChemDraw for chemical structures), numbered sequentially by type using arabic numerals, and cited in the text discussion. Each multipart figure, scheme, or equation must be assembled into a single object, and lines should not be placed around the entire display element. Display elements may be resized during production; for further details about the graphics specifications for display elements, see Appendix 2: Preparing Graphics . Any references that are cited in a caption need to be clarified with a credit line; that is, the caption must make clear whether the graphic has been adapted or reproduced from another source or is original but based on material from another source (see Copyright and Permissions for more information). Display elements in the Supporting Information should be numbered sequentially and discretely from those in the manuscript.

Specifications for preparing graphics are detailed below.

Acknowledgments

Include acknowledgments of grant and other financial support, technical assistance, colleagues’ advice, and so on. Do not use professional titles or honorifics in this section. Persons other than the authors who are acknowledged for having created artwork should also provide documentation granting consent to use their work.

Supporting Information for Publication

Supporting Information (SI) is material (e.g., figures, raw data, movies, media files, lengthy tables, sample computer files, student handouts, details for setting up and performing an Activity, Demonstration, or Laboratory Experiment) separate from the manuscript that will be published only online. Supporting Information, including separate materials for instructors and students, is required for Activities, Demonstrations, and Laboratory Experiments, and is optional for other manuscript types. The Supporting Information should be original material produced by the authors for publication in JCE and not previously published elsewhere or duplicated in the manuscript. Only those materials that are most relevant to the submission should be included, and the Supporting Information must be discussed in the text. If presentations are included, they are subject to the same policies concerning copyright and permissions as is other content.

For supplementary material that is not formally submitted as Supporting Information but is hosted on an author’s website, a description of the material and the URL for the website should be included in a separate paragraph following the list of SI files. In addition, the URL may be provided by citing this material in the manuscript and including a corresponding reference in the References section.

See the Supporting Information section for additional details.

A thorough literature review should be conducted, and the submission should be placed within the context of previously published work, including that which has appeared in JCE . Citations and references should follow the publication style found in The ACS Style Guide . Titles are required for all works cited; please provide complete publication information, including an issue number where applicable, and a DOI. Unpublished work that has been cited should be uploaded for editorial review. Reference call-out numbers in the text should be superscripted sequential Arabic numerals. Journal names are abbreviated according to the Chemical Abstracts Service Source Index (CASSI). Page ranges for articles as well as book citations should also be provided. Rather than providing URLs in the main text of the manuscript, add a citation for each discrete URL and include it sequentially in the References section with an “accessed” statement: “(accessed [Month] 20XX).” References to resources only in a language other than English will be largely inaccessible to JCE readers; including sufficient references to English- language resources will benefit readers and increase the value of the manuscript.

Textual material that might otherwise constitute a footnote or endnote must be incorporated into the References section and presented using complete sentences.

This information is provided to the reviewers during the peer-review process (for Review Only) and is available to readers of the published work (for Publication). Supporting Information must be submitted at the same time as the manuscript. See the list of Acceptable Software by File Designation and confirm that your Supporting Information is viewable .

If the manuscript is accompanied by any supporting information files for publication, these files will be made available to readers. A brief, nonsentence description of the actual contents of each file, including the file type extension, is required. This description should be labeled Supporting Information and should appear before the Acknowledgement and Reference sections.  Examples of sufficient and insufficient descriptions are as follows:

Examples of sufficient descriptions: “Supporting Information: 1 H NMR spectra for all compounds (PDF)” or “Additional experimental details, materials, and methods, including photographs of experimental setup (DOC)”.

Examples of insufficient descriptions: “Supporting Information: Figures S1-S3” or “Additional figures as mentioned in the text”.

When including supporting information for review only, include copies of references that are unpublished or in-press. These files are available only to editors and reviewers.

All ACS journals strongly encourage authors to make the research data underlying their articles publicly available at the time of publication.

Research data is defined as materials and information used in the experiments that enable the validation of the conclusions drawn in the article, including primary data produced by the authors for the study being reported, secondary data reused or analyzed by the authors for the study, and any other materials necessary to reproduce or replicate the results.

The ACS Research Data Policy provides additional information on Data Availability Statements, Data Citation, and Data Repositories.

A well-written paper helps share your results most clearly. ACS Publications’ English Editing Service is designed to help scientists communicate their research effectively. Our subject-matter expert editors will edit your manuscript for grammar, spelling, and other language errors so your ideas are presented at their best.

The quality of illustrations in ACS journals and partner journals depends on the quality of the original files provided by the authors. Figures are not modified or enhanced by journal production staff. All graphics must be prepared and submitted in digital format.

Graphics should be inserted into the main body whenever possible. Please see Appendix 2 for additional information.

Any graphic (figure chart, scheme, or equation) that has appeared in an earlier publication should include a credit line citing the original source. Authors are responsible for obtaining written permission to re-use this material.

The impact of your research is not limited to what you can express with words. Tables and figures such as graphs, photographs, illustrations, diagrams, and other visuals can play a significant role in effectively communicating your findings. Our Artwork Editing and Graphical Abstract services generate publication-ready figures and Table of Contents (TOC) graphics that conform to your chosen journal’s specifications. For figures, this includes changes to file type, resolution, color space, font, scale, line weights, and layout (to improve readability and professional appearance). For TOC graphics, our illustrators can work with a rough sketch or concept or help extract the key findings of your manuscript directly for use as a visual summary of your paper.

Preparing for Submission

Manuscripts, graphics, supporting information, and required forms, as well as manuscript revisions, must all be submitted in digital format through ACS Paragon Plus , which requires an ACS ID to log in. Registering for an ACS ID is fast, free, and does not require an ACS membership. Please refer to Appendix 1 for additional information on preparing your submission

JCE considers for publication only original work that has not been previously published and is not under consideration for publication elsewhere. Material published jointly by the Journal and the Publications Division of the ACS is subject to the terms of the Journal Publishing Agreement, signed on behalf of all authors. Exceptions to this policy are described below.

Preprints, Theses, and Dissertations

JCE authors are allowed to deposit an initial draft of their manuscript in a preprint repository such as ChemRxiv , arXiv , or bioRxiv . Please note that any use of a preprint server needs to be disclosed in the cover letter during submission and, as appropriate, state how the manuscript has been adjusted/updated between deposition and submission. Upon publication in JCE , authors should add a link from the preprint to the published article via the Digital Object Identifier (DOI). Some preprint servers, including ChemRxiv and bioRxiv, add this link for authors automatically after publication. The ACS Publications policy on theses and dissertations is available online .

Proceedings of Conferences and Symposia

Publication of a preprint or extended abstract in an ACS division meeting preprint book, in either print or electronic format, does not preclude consideration of a manuscript for publication, provided that the manuscript includes significant new information and data beyond what was in the preprint or extended abstract. It is the author’s responsibility to provide the Editor with copies of any relevant preprint(s). The Editors will make the decision on the suitability of the paper for publication. Upon publication in JCE , authors are advised to add a link from the preprint to the published paper via the citation and Digital Object Identifier (DOI).

JCE will consider for publication a paper that has been posted on an electronic site available to the general public, provided that the site is the personal site of the author or that of a funding agency (i.e., government or non-profit foundation) and is not connected to a commercial site that holds copyright to the material. Authors must notify JCE at the time of submission if the material has been available on the Internet or equivalent electronic media.

Initial Processing

JCE editors initially evaluate each submitted manuscript to determine whether it should be sent for peer review based on its meeting publication requirements and adherence to the stated criteria for its Manuscript Type. Submissions that do not comply with protocols will be returned to authors (or “unsubmitted”).

The Journal does not conduct preassessments prior to formal submission, nor are presubmission inquiries regarding proposals considered outside the ACS Paragon Plus environment. The JCE Editorial Office is unable to provide information pertaining to analytics. Authors can track statistics pertaining to their own articles in the ACS Researcher Resources .

Using Material from Other Sources

The American Chemical Society has strict policies regarding the use of material from other sources. Permissions are not needed for material that the author produced or that is copyrighted by ACS. Authors must obtain permissions from copyright holders to use figures, illustrations, or photographs from other sources that appear in the author’s manuscript and Supporting Information, even if the author produced the content originally. Documentation must be uploaded into ACS Paragon Plus before a manuscript can be sent to reviewers. See the Copyright and Permissions section for additional information.

Appropriate Material

The following material is suggested for use:

  • Photographs, illustrations, and figures created by the authors. Model releases  must be signed by people who are identifiable in photographs, including authors.
  • Figures for which ACS owns the copyright and that have been published previously in an ACS journal. Citations and credit lines are needed.
  • Work for which formal permission has been obtained (including student work; see the Use of Student Work section). Authors must obtain permission from the copyright owner. Credit lines are needed.

Inappropriate Material

The following material is inappropriate:

  • Logos (including commercial and institutional logos, logos on spectra, and logos shown on instrumentation in photographs). These images should be obscured by blurring, cropping, or masking.
  • Trademarked product names or brand names (whether in images or in the text). These names should be replaced by generic names wherever possible.
  • Stock photography, clip art, and cartoons (even if the images have been paid for).
  • Images of currency (paper or coins), postage stamps, or flags from any country.
  • Screenshots (or “captures”) from software companies, unless permission has been obtained from the software producer (including those that provide freely available material). Interfaces are considered to be proprietary. Permission also is required for screenshots showing ACS content and content from YouTube and similar Web entities. Note that screenshots cannot show logos, brand names, or other content that has been copyrighted elsewhere.
  • Material from Wikipedia, Flickr, or similar websites.
  • Creative Commons content. Creative Commons licenses should be carefully scrutinized. Some versions of the license permit the use of material for commercial purposes; others do not. Use of material in ACS journals is considered commercial because ACS sells subscriptions (“educational” use does not qualify). It is the responsibility of authors to carefully review the provisions of Creative Commons licenses, to follow any stipulations of the license, and to provide documentation to the journal's editorial office summarizing the license provisions and the ways in which the requirements have been met (in a letter, for example).
  • Material from the Internet (unless produced by the author). Images pulled from the Internet cannot be used without permission from the original source, even if the source is cited.
  • Art of unknown provenance that cannot be attributed to a specific source, especially that which has appeared in “old” publications.
  • YouTube videos not created by the authors. Links may be included rather than providing videos.

Use of Student Work

If examples of student work (including anonymous work) are provided in the manuscript or the Supporting Information, documentation indicating that students have granted their consent should be uploaded along with the submission files. Documentation may include institutional review board (IRB) forms or permission statements from the students themselves. Full student names should not appear in the manuscript or Supporting Information.

Requests to reproduce content published in JCE are handled via the RightsLink permission system.

Peer Review

Those manuscripts that meet the initial requirements are assigned to an Associate Editor (AE). The AE sends the manuscript to reviewers for them to evaluate according to the following criteria:

  • Scholarship (scientific and scholarly rigor)
  • Novelty (originality, innovation, creativity)
  • Pedagogy (educational relevance, insight)
  • Utility (usefulness to readers, rationale)
  • Presentation (organization, comprehensiveness, readability)

Reviewers may recommend “publish as is”, “minor revision”, “major revision”, or “do not publish”. After the reviewers have submitted their comments and suggestions, the AE evaluates their arguments and recommendations and makes a decision whether to approve, request a minor or major revision, or reject the manuscript. The AE adjudicates based on the reviewer comments; however, the reviews are not to be considered “votes”, and the review process is not one of “majority rules”. Very few manuscripts are published as originally submitted; nearly all are recommended for revision and are improved in response to reviewer suggestions before being accepted and published.

Because of the many submissions the Journal receives—and because manuscripts are unique and require varying levels of attention—definitive processing times cannot be guaranteed. Authors are notified once their manuscripts proceed to the next stage.

Types of Decisions

Decision types include revision, reject and resubmit, reject, and accept. Decisions are based on reviews and assessments made by the JCE Editorial Office. All resubmissions and revisions must be formally processed via the ACS Paragon Plus environment.

The Editor-in-Chief (EIC) or AE may request a minor or major revision at any point during the peer- review process. The revised manuscript must be accompanied by a cover letter that acknowledges the revision as well as a separate author response document that contains a detailed, itemized list of changes made to the manuscript and reasons why a reviewer’s suggestion or concern does not merit a change. Reiterate reviewer comments and follow each with a response. In this way, the editors can refer to a single document rather than having to revisit separate documents. The author’s response may also be entered or pasted into a text box provided by ACS Paragon Plus for this purpose. Ensure that the latest files have been uploaded and that there are no extraneous files. Files showing changes may be uploaded for review purposes. However, “clean” files should be provided. If the track changes feature in Word has been used, ensure for the manuscript file and Supporting Information file(s) that all changes have been accepted and comments resolved, and that the track changes feature has been turned off.

Reject and Resubmit

The EIC or AE may reject a submission with editorial or external peer review, yet invite a revision based on the merit of the submission. Typically, the decision letter will contain a list of suggested improvements. A thorough cover letter and a document containing itemized responses to reviewer comments must accompany the resubmission. Previous manuscript identification numbers should be referenced, and the changes that have been made to the manuscript should be clearly stated in the cover letter. The revised manuscript will be handled as a new submission and will be given a new receipt date.

The EIC or AE may reject a manuscript based on either editorial or external peer review at any point during the peer-review process after determining that the submission is not within the scope or objectives of the Journal. If there is no invitation to resubmit, permission from the AE should first be sought before resubmitting a previously rejected manuscript. Previous manuscript identification numbers should be referenced, and the changes that have been made to the manuscript should be clearly stated in the cover letter.

When the EIC or AE is satisfied with the submission, it is formally accepted, and the files are forwarded to ACS for production and publication. ACS contacts authors regarding page proofs, which should be reviewed carefully. After page proofs are approved, the manuscript will be published online as an Article ASAP available through the ACS website. Once a manuscript appears on the Web it is considered published. Any change to the manuscript will need to be submitted to the JCE Editorial Office as an Addition and Correction.

When submitting their manuscripts to ACS Paragon Plus, authors may suggest reviewers and are encouraged to provide the names, affiliations, e-mail addresses, and a few words explaining their qualifications to review the manuscript. These reviewers’ names will be added to the unranked list of suggested reviewers for the submission. Editors may choose to invite any, all, or none of the suggested reviewers to evaluate the submission. Including suggested reviewers assists the Journal in expanding its reviewer pool. Authors are encouraged to avoid suggesting reviewers from the authors’ institutions. Do not suggest reviewers who may have a real or perceived conflict of interest . Whenever possible, suggest academic email addresses rather than personal email addresses.

If your submission is declined for publication by this journal, the editors might deem your work to be better suited for another ACS Publications journal or partner journal and suggest that the authors consider transferring the submission. Manuscript Transfer simplifies and shortens the process of submitting to another ACS journal or partner journal, as all the coauthors, suggested reviewers, manuscript files, and responses to submission questions are copied by ACS Paragon Plus to the new draft submission. Authors are free to accept or decline the transfer offer.

Note that each journal is editorially independent. Transferring a manuscript is not a guarantee that the manuscript will be accepted, as the final publication decision will belong to the editor of the next journal.

PRODUCTION AND PUBLICATION

Correction of the galley proofs is the responsibility of the Corresponding Author. The Corresponding Author of an accepted manuscript will receive e-mail notification and complete instructions when page proofs are available for review via ACS Direct Correct . Extensive or important changes on page proofs, including changes to the title or list of authors, are subject to review by the editor.

It is the responsibility of the Corresponding Author to ensure that all authors listed on the manuscript agree with the changes made on the proofs. Galley proofs should be returned within 48 hours in order to ensure timely publication of the manuscript.

Accepted manuscripts will be published on the ACS Publications Web site as soon as page proofs are corrected and all author concerns are resolved. The first date on which the document is published on the Web is considered the publication date.

Publication of manuscripts on the Web may occur weeks in advance of the cover date of the issue of publication. Authors should take this into account when planning their patent and intellectual property activities related to a document and should ensure that all patent information is available at the time of first publication, whether ASAP or issue publication.

All articles published ahead of print receive a unique Digital Object Identifier (DOI) number, which is used to cite the manuscript before and after the paper appears in an issue.

Manuscripts will be published on the “ASAP Articles” page on the web as soon as page proofs are corrected and all author concerns are resolved. ASAP publication usually occurs within a few working days of receipt of page proof corrections, which can be several weeks in advance of the cover date of the issue.

The American Chemical Society follows guidance from the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE) when considering any ethical concerns regarding a published article, Retractions, and Expressions of Concern.

Additions and Corrections

Additions and Corrections may be requested by the author(s) or initiated by the Editor to address important issues or correct errors and omissions of consequence that arise after publication of an article. All Additions and Corrections are subject to approval by the Editor, and should bring new and directly relevant information and corrections that fix scientific facts. Minor corrections and additions will not be published. Readers who detect errors of consequence in the work of others should contact the corresponding author of that work.

Additions and Corrections must be submitted as new manuscripts via ACS Paragon Plus by the Corresponding Author for publication in the “Addition/Correction” section of the Journal. The corresponding author should obtain approval from all coauthors prior to submitting or provide evidence that such approval has been solicited. The manuscript should include the original article title and author list, citation including DOI, and details of the correction.

Retractions

Articles may be retracted for scientific or ethical reasons and may be requested by the article author(s) or by the journal Editor(s), but are ultimately published at the discretion of the Editor. Articles that contain seriously flawed or erroneous data such that their findings and conclusions cannot be relied upon may be retracted in order to correct the scientific record. When an article is retracted, a notice of Retraction will be published containing information about the reason for the Retraction. The originally published article will remain online except in extraordinary circumstances (e.g. where deemed legally necessary, or if the availability of the published content poses public health risks).

Expressions of Concern

Expressions of Concern may be issued at the discretion of the Editor if:

  • there is inconclusive evidence of research or publication misconduct by the authors;
  • there is evidence that the findings are unreliable but the authors’ institution will not investigate the case;
  • an investigation into alleged misconduct related to the publication either has not been, or would not be, fair and impartial or conclusive;
  • an investigation is underway but a judgment will not be available for a considerable time.

Upon completion of any related investigation, and when a final determination is made about the outcome of the article, the Expression of Concern may be replaced with a Retraction notice or Correction.

At ACS Publications, we know it is important for you to be able to share your peer reviewed, published work with colleagues in the global community of scientists. As sharing on sites known as scholarly collaboration networks (SCNs) is becoming increasingly prevalent in today’s scholarly research ecosystem, we would like to remind you of the many ways in which you, a valued ACS author, can share your published work .

Publishing open access makes it easy to share your work with friends, colleagues, and family members. In addition, ACS Publications makes it easy to share your newly published research with ACS Articles on Request (see below). Don’t forget to promote your research and related data on social media, at conferences, and through scholarly communication networks. Increase the impact of your research using the following resources: Altmetrics , Figshare , ACS Certified Deposit

When your article is published in an ACS journal or partner journal, corresponding authors are provided with a link that offers up to 50 free digital prints of the final published work. This link is valid for the first 12 months following online publication, and can be shared via email or an author’s website. After one year, the access restrictions to your article will be lifted, and you can share the Articles on Request URL on social media and other channels. To access all your Articles on Request links, log in to your ACS Researcher Resources account and visit the “My Published Manuscripts” page.

Article , journal , and commercial reprints are available to order.

Appendix 1: PREPARING FOR SUBMISSION

We’ve developed ACS’ publishing and editorial policies in consultation with the research communities that we serve, including authors and librarians. Browse our policies below to learn more.

Ethical Guidelines

ACS editors have provided Ethical Guidelines for persons engaged in the publication of chemical research—specifically, for editors, authors, and reviewers. Each journal also has a specific policy on prior publication .

OFAC Compliance

As a U.S.-based non-profit organization, the American Chemical Society (ACS) is required to comply with U.S. sanctions laws and regulations administered by the U.S. Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC). While these laws and regulations permit U.S.-based publishers like ACS to engage in publishing-related activities with authors located in sanctioned regions in many cases, ACS may be prohibited under U.S. law from engaging in publishing-related activities in some cases, including, but not limited to, instances where an author or the institution with which an author is affiliated is located in a particular sanctioned region or has been designated by OFAC as a Specially Designated National (SDN) pursuant to certain U.S. sanctions programs. ACS reserves the right to refrain from engaging in any publishing-related activities that ACS determines in its sole discretion may be in violation of U.S. law.

Safety Considerations

Authors must emphasize any unexpected, new, and/or significant hazards or risks associated with the reported work. This information should be in the Experimental Section of a full article and included in the main text of a letter. Statement examples can be found in the Safety Statement Style Sheet  and additional information on communicating safety information from the  ACS Guide to Scholarly Communication is freely available here .

Conflict of Interest Disclosure

A statement describing any financial conflicts of interest or lack thereof is published in each ACS journal and partner journal article.

During the submission process, the Corresponding Author must provide a statement on behalf of all authors of the manuscript, describing all potential sources of bias, including affiliations, funding sources, and financial or management relationships, that may constitute conflicts of interest. If the manuscript is accepted, the statement will be published in the final article.

If the manuscript is accepted and no conflict of interest has been declared, the following statement will be published in the final article: “The authors declare no competing financial interest.”

In publishing only original research, ACS is committed to deterring plagiarism, including self-plagiarism. ACS Publications uses CrossCheck's iThenticate software to screen submitted manuscripts for similarity to published material. Note that your manuscript may be screened during the submission process.

Further information about plagiarism can be found in Part B of the Ethical Guidelines to Publication of Chemical Research . See also the press release regarding ACS' participation in the CrossCheck initiative.

Authorship, Author List, and Coauthor Notification

Authors are required to obtain the consent of all their coauthors prior to submitting a manuscript. The submitting author accepts the responsibility of notifying all coauthors that the manuscript is being submitted.

During manuscript submission, the submitting author must provide contact information (full name, email address, institutional affiliation, and mailing address) for all of the coauthors. Because all of the author names are automatically imported into the electronic Journal Publishing Agreement , the names must be entered into ACS Paragon Plus. (Note that coauthors are not required to register in ACS Paragon Plus.) Author affiliation should reflect where the work was completed, even if the author has since left that institution. Authors may include a note with a current address if their institution has changed since the work was completed.

To expedite the processing of your manuscript, please format your author and affiliation information according the guidelines in this link: https://pubsapp.acs.org/paragonplus/submission/author-address-information.pdf .

Criteria for authorship can be found in Part B of the Ethical Guidelines to Publication of Chemical Research . Artificial intelligence (AI) tools do not qualify for authorship. The use of AI tools for text or image generation should be disclosed in the manuscript within the Acknowledgment section with a description of when and how the tools were used. For more substantial use cases or descriptions of AI tool use, authors should provide full details within the Methods or other appropriate section of the manuscript.

If any change in authorship is necessary after a manuscript has been submitted, confirmation is required that all of the authors (including those being added or removed) have been notified and have agreed to the change. To provide this confirmation, authors are asked to complete and sign an authorship change form and provide the completed form to the appropriate editorial office.

Authors with a single name:  If you, or any of your coauthors, have only one name, please follow these steps for proper submission to ACS Paragon Plus:

  • First (Given) Name Field: Enter an asterisk (*) into the "First (Given) Name" field.
  • Last (Family) Name Field: Enter your single name into the "Last (Family) Name" field.

If your paper is accepted, the asterisk (*) will be removed from the published version of the paper.

Patent Activities and Intellectual Property

Authors are responsible for ensuring that all patent activities and intellectual property issues are satisfactorily resolved prior to first publication (ASAP or in issue). Acceptance and publication will not be delayed for pending or unresolved issues of this nature.

Open Researcher and Contributor ID (ORCID)

Authors submitting manuscript revisions are required to provide their own personal, validated ORCID iD before completing the submission, if an ORCID iD is not already associated with their ACS Paragon Plus user profiles. This ID may be provided during original manuscript submission or when submitting the manuscript revision. All authors are strongly encouraged to register for an ORCID iD, a unique researcher identifier. The ORCID iD will be displayed in the published article for any author on a manuscript who has a validated ORCID iD associated with ACS when the manuscript is accepted.

ORCID iDs should not be typed into the manuscript. ACS publishes only those ORCID iDs that have been properly verified and linked before the manuscript is accepted . After your ORCID iD is linked, it will be displayed automatically in all subsequently accepted manuscripts for any/all ACS journals. We do not publish ORCID iDs provided during proof review or via other communications after a manuscript is accepted for publication.

With an ORCID iD, you can create a profile of your research activities to distinguish yourself from other researchers with similar names, and make it easier for your colleagues to find your publications. If you do not yet have an ORCID iD, or you wish to associate your existing ORCID iD with your ACS Paragon Plus account, you may do so by clicking on “Edit Your Profile” from your ACS Paragon Plus account homepage and following the ORCID-related links. Learn more at www.orcid.org .

Copyright and Permissions

To obtain forms and guidelines for completing the Journal Publishing Agreement or obtaining permissions from copyright owners, and to explore a Copyright Learning Module for chemists, click here .

Funder Reporting Requirement

Authors are required to report funding sources and grant/award numbers. Enter ALL sources of funding for ALL authors in BOTH the Funder Registry Tool in ACS Paragon Plus and in your manuscript to meet this requirement.

Open Access Compliance

ACS offers options by which authors can fulfill the requirements for open access and deposition into repositories for funded research. Visit our ACS Open Science site to see how to fulfill requirements for specific funders  and to find out if you are eligible to publish under a Read + Publish agreement between ACS and your institution. You can also find out more about Open Access Compliance and ACS Open Science initiatives .

Diversity and Inclusion Statement

During manuscript submission, ACS journal authors have the option to submit a statement sharing information related to diversity and inclusion that is relevant for their paper. If supplying a diversity and inclusion statement, the corresponding author must provide this on behalf of all authors of the manuscript during the submission process. These statements include but are not limited to analysis of citation diversity and acknowledgment of indigenous land on which research was conducted. Statements expressing political beliefs are not permitted and may be removed by the journal office. All statements are subject to final review by the Editor.

  • Citation Diversity Statement: The citation diversity statement should appear in the Acknowledgements section of the manuscript. ACS recommends including the following: (1) the importance of citation diversity, (2) the proportion of citations by gender and race/ethnicity for the first and last authors, (3) the method used to determine those proportions and its limitations, and (4) steps taken to by the authors to improve citation diversity in the article. We recognize that one limitation of the current methods is that it cannot account for intersex, non-binary, and transgender people, or Indigenous and mixed-race authors. (Adapted from BMES/Springer Guidelines )
  • Land acknowledgment: The land acknowledgment statement should appear in the Acknowledgements section of the manuscript. The statement should link to the institutions’ formal land acknowledgments on which the research took place, if possible. Further guidance for creating these statements can be found here: https://nativegov.org/news/a-guide-to-indigenous-land-acknowledgment/ .

Appendix 2: Preparing Graphics

Digital graphics pasted into manuscripts should have the following minimum resolutions:

  • Black and white line art, 1200 dpi
  • Grayscale art, 600 dpi
  • Color art, 300 dpi

Graphics must fit a one- or two-column format. Single-column graphics can be sized up to 240 points wide (3.33 in.) and double-column graphics must be sized between 300 and 504 points (4.167 in. and 7 in.). The maximum depth for all graphics is 660 points (9.167 in.) including the caption (allow 12 pts. For each line of caption text). Lettering should be no smaller than 4.5 points in the final published format. The text should be legible when the graphic is viewed full-size. Helvetica or Arial fonts work well for lettering. Lines should be no thinner than 0.5 point.

Color may be used to enhance the clarity of complex structures, figures, spectra, and schemes, etc., and color reproduction of graphics is provided at no additional cost to the author. Graphics intended to appear in black and white or grayscale should not be submitted in color.

Type of Graphics

Table of contents (toc)/abstract graphic.

Consult the Guidelines for Table of Contents/Abstract Graphics for specifications.

Our team of subject-matter experts and graphical designers can also help generate a compelling TOC graphic to convey your key findings. Learn more about our Graphical Abstract service .

A caption giving the figure number and a brief description must be included below each figure. The caption should be understandable without reference to the text. It is preferable to place any key to symbols used in the artwork itself, not in the caption. Ensure that any symbols and abbreviations used in the text agree with those in the artwork.

Charts (groups of structures that do not show reactions) may have a brief caption describing their contents.

Each table must have a brief (one phrase or sentence) title that describes the contents. The title should be understandable without reference to the text. Details should be put in footnotes, not in the title. Tables should be used when the data cannot be presented clearly in the narrative, when many numbers must be presented, or when more meaningful inter-relationships can be conveyed by the tabular format. Tables should supplement, not duplicate, information presented in the text and figures. Tables should be simple and concise.

Each scheme (sequences of reactions) may have a brief caption describing its contents.

Chemical Structures

Chemical structures should be produced with the use of a drawing program such as ChemDraw.

Journal of Chemical Education  authors are encouraged to submit images to be considered for use on the journal’s front cover or Supplementary Covers at the time of submission of their revised manuscript. If your article is accepted for publication, your suggestion may also be selected for use on one of the journal’s covers. Images chosen for the front cover will be published at no cost to the author. If your art is selected for the front cover, ACS will send you information about how to request one complimentary 18” by 24” printed poster featuring your work.

Authors should submit high-resolution, engaging, relevant images to be considered for use as cover art, including images showing students (and people generally) engaged in chemistry. Table of Contents graphics are rarely suitable as cover art. Authors must ensure that all images for consideration have been created by them or, if not, that the appropriate permissions for commercial use have been secured.

Image files should be submitted as TIF, JPG, PNG, or EPS files (not PDF or PPT) with a resolution of at least 300 dpi for pixel-based images. Cover art should be 8.19 in. × 10 in. (20.80 cm × 25.4 cm), and submission of “layered” artwork is encouraged. Please note that the journal title will cover the top 2 in. (5.08 cm) of the image. Authors should submit the cover image, along with a short, clear legend (less than 50 words) explaining the image, as supplementary files to ACS Paragon Plus with their revised manuscript

If you wish to be considered only for the front cover, and not a paid supplementary cover, please respond NO accordingly to the Journal Covers question in ACS Paragon Plus. For more information on the Supplementary Covers program, please see this webpage . All art submitted for consideration for a supplementary cover will also be considered for a front cover.

Web Enhanced Objects (WEO)

The Web editions of ACS journals allow readers to view multimedia attachments such as animations and movies that complement understanding of the research being reported.

WEOs should be uploaded in ACS Paragon Plus with ‘Web Enhanced Object’ selected as the file designation. Consult the list of compatible WEO formats .

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JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL EDUCATION

journal of chemical education

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Subject Area Rank Percentile
Category: Social Sciences
Subcategory: Education
221 / 1543
Category: Social Sciences
Subcategory: General Chemistry
132 / 408
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N/A N/A N/A
Quartiles By JIFCollectionQuartileRankPercentage
Category: CHEMISTRY, MULTIDISCIPLINARYSCIEQ2114/230
Category: EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINESSCIEQ223/85
Quartiles By JCICollectionQuartileRankPercentage
Category: CHEMISTRY, MULTIDISCIPLINARYSCIEQ264/231
Category: EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINESSCIEQ227/85
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journal of chemical education

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journal of chemical education

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Chemical education articles from across Nature Portfolio

Chemical education covers all aspects of teaching and learning chemistry. It encompasses methods used in devoted education institutes — including classroom lectures, demonstrations and laboratory activities — and also the broader topic of educating the public, whose misunderstanding of the topic can be detrimental to the progress of the discipline.

Latest Research and Reviews

journal of chemical education

A recirculating device of cooling water powered by solar energy for the laboratory

  • Wenhao Deng

journal of chemical education

A new method for the preparation of MgAl layered double hydroxide-copper metal–organic frameworks structures: application to electrocatalytic oxidation of formaldehyde

  • Biuck Habibi
  • Ali Pashazadeh
  • Lotf Ali Saghatforoush

journal of chemical education

A home-made pipette droplet microfluidics rapid prototyping and training kit for digital PCR, microorganism/cell encapsulation and controlled microgel synthesis

  • Chenguang Zhang
  • Hsueh-Chia Chang

journal of chemical education

Automated monitoring the kinetics of homogeneous and heterogeneous chemical processes using a smartphone

  • Mateus H. Keller
  • Raphaell Moreira
  • Bruno S. Souza

journal of chemical education

Split flow humidity generator equilibration and stability study

  • Justin M. Curtiss
  • Darren K. Emge

journal of chemical education

A review and critique of academic lab safety research

Despite the regular occurrence of high-profile accidents leading to serious injuries or deaths among lab personnel, the state of academic lab safety research has languished. Existing studies in this area are summarized and critiqued in this Review and suggestions are made for future research directions.

  • A. Dana Ménard
  • John F. Trant

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Digital skills in chemical education.

The role of computers in the chemical sciences is changing. Previously the domain of the theoretical or computational chemist, advanced digital skills, including data analysis, automation and simulation, are becoming extremely relevant to all. Here, we discuss the importance of integrating digital skills into an undergraduate chemistry programme and highlight some work currently being carried out to achieve this.

  • Andrew R. McCluskey
  • Miguel Rivera
  • Antonia S. J. S. Mey

journal of chemical education

Chromatic inclusivity in chemistry

Reliance on colour-based experiments in the undergraduate laboratory is a considerable hurdle for those with colour vision deficiency. Designing course material that relies on interpretation and not perception creates a more accessible environment for all.

  • Nicholas J. Roberts
  • Jennifer L. MacDonald

Join the club

Following the success of our current journal club collaborations, we would like to encourage more groups of early-career researchers to get involved.

journal of chemical education

Is educational research science, superstition or confidence trick?

Chemistry education research is a well-established field that has the potential to inform chemistry teaching at all levels. But to the uninitiated, much of the work can seem descriptive while quantitative studies often suffer from a lack of reproducibility. Here I delve into these characteristics and explain why this should not deter chemistry teachers from engaging.

  • Keith S. Taber

journal of chemical education

Making chemistry accessible for learners with vision impairment

Pupils with vision impairment face significant challenges in learning science. Here, the authors discuss the impact of an inaccessible curriculum and new ideas that can improve accessibility.

  • Zoe Schnepp
  • Robyn Watson

journal of chemical education

Implications of a critical realism approach to chemistry research and education

Critical realism distinguishes the ‘real’ world from the ‘observable’ one, which scientists explore as actors rather than as passive, neutral observers. Through this lens, it is clear that a diverse community that interrogates the world from different angles is an asset to the practice of chemistry itself.

  • Margaret A. L. Blackie

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journal of chemical education

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Chemistry Education Research and Practice

The free to access journal for teachers, researchers and other practitioners in chemistry education

journal of chemical education

You can find details about how to access information remotely in this step-by-step guide . The guide will also help if for any reason you have difficulty accessing the content you want.

What would you like to know about Chemistry Education Research and Practice?

Impact factor: 2.6*

Time to first decision (all decisions): 25.0 days**

Time to first decision (peer reviewed only): 40.0 days***

Editor: Scott Lewis

Chair: David F Treagust

Indexed in Scopus and Web of Science

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Chemistry Education Research and Practice (CERP) is the journal for teachers, researchers and other practitioners at all levels of chemistry education. It is published free of charge electronically four times a year, thanks to sponsorship by the Royal Society of Chemistry's Education Division. Coverage includes the following:

  • Research, and reviews of research, in chemistry education
  • Evaluations of effective innovative practice in the teaching of chemistry
  • In-depth analyses of issues of direct relevance to chemistry education

The objectives of the journal:

  • To provide researchers with the means to publish their work in full in a journal exclusively dedicated to chemistry education
  • To offer teachers of chemistry at all levels a place where they can share effective ideas and methods for the teaching and learning of chemistry
  • To bridge the gap between the two groups so that researchers will have their results seen by those who could benefit from using them, and practitioners will gain from encountering the ideas and results of those who have made a particular study of the learning process

Guidance on the nature of acceptable contributions can be found in Recognising quality in reports of chemistry education research and practice .

image block

Meet the team

Find out who is on the editorial and advisory boards for the  Chemistry Education Research and Practice (CERP) journal.

David F Treagust ,  Curtin University of Technology, Australia

Scott  Lewis ,  University of South Florida, USA

Deputy editor

Nicole Graulich , Justus-Liebig Universität Gießen, Germany

Associate editors

Jack Barbera , Portland State University, USA

Mageswary Karpudewan , Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM)

James Nyachwaya , North Dakota State University, USA

Editorial board members

Mei-Hung Chiu , National Taiwan Normal University, Taiwan

Resa Kelly , San Jose State University, USA

Gwen Lawrie , University of Queensland, Australia

David Read , University of Southampton, UK

Bill Byers , University of Ulster, UK

Melanie Cooper , Michigan State University, USA

Onno de Jong, University of Utrecht, Netherlands Iztok Devetak , University of Ljubljana, Slovenia

Odilla Finlayson , Dublin City University, Ireland

Loretta Jones , University of Northern Colorado, USA

Orla Catherine Kelly , Church of Ireland College of Education, Ireland

Scott Lewis, Editor, University of South Florida, USA

Iwona Maciejowska, Jagiellonian University, Poland Rachel Mamlok-Naaman , The Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel

David McGarvey, Keele University, UK Mansoor Niaz , Universidad de Oriente, Venezuela MaryKay Orgill , University of Nevada, Las Vegas, USA George Papageorgiou , Democritus University of Thrace, Greece Ilka Parchmann , University of Kiel, Germany Michael K. Seery , University of Edinburgh, UK

Keith Taber , University of Cambridge, UK Daniel Tan , Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

Zoltán Toth , University of Debrecen, Hungary

Georgios Tsaparlis , (Founding Editor), University of Ioannina, Greece

Jan H van Driel , The University of Melbourne, Australia

Mihye Won , Monash University, Australia

Lisa Clatworthy , Managing Editor

Helen Saxton , Editorial Production Manager

Becky Webb , Senior Publishing Editor

Laura Cooper , Publishing Editor

Hannah Dunckley , Publishing Editor

Natalie Ford , Publishing Assistant

Journal specific guidelines

The intended emphasis is on the process of learning, not on the content. Contributions describing alternative ways of presenting chemical information to students (including the description of new demonstrations or laboratory experiments or computer simulations or animations) are unlikely to be considered for publication. All contributions should be written in clear and concise English. Technical language should be kept to the absolute minimum required by accuracy. Authors are urged to pay particular attention to the way references are cited both in the text and in the bibliography.

The journal has three objectives.

First  to provide researchers a means to publish high quality, fully peer reviewed, educational research reports in the special domain of chemistry education. The studies reported should have all features of scholarship in chemistry education, that is they must be:

  • original and previously unpublished
  • theory based
  • supported by empirical data
  • of generalisable character.

The last requirement means that the studies should have an interest for and an impact on the global practice of chemistry, and not be simply of a regional character. Contributions must include a review of the research literature relevant to the topic, and state clearly the way(s) the study contributes to our knowledge base. Last but not least, they should conclude with implications for other research and/or the practice of chemistry teaching.

Second   to offer practitioners (teachers of chemistry at all levels) a place where they can share effective ideas and methods for the teaching and learning of chemistry and issues related to these, including assessment.

The emphasis is on effectiveness, the demonstration that the approach described is successful, possibly more so than the alternatives. Contributions are particularly welcome if the subject matter can be applied widely and is concerned with encouraging active, independent or cooperative learning.

Of special interest are methods that increase student motivation for learning, and those that help them to become effective exploiters of their chemical knowledge and understanding. It is highly desirable that such contributions should be demonstrably based, wherever possible, on established educational theory and results.

Third  to help to bridge the gap between educational researchers and practitioners by providing a single platform where both groups can publish high-quality papers with the realistic hope that researchers will find their results seen by those who could benefit from using them.

Also, practitioners will gain from encountering the ideas and results of those who have made a particular study of the learning process in finding better ways to improve their teaching and the learning experience of their students.  

Articles should be submitted using ScholarOne , the Royal Society of Chemistry's article review and submission system. A printed copy of the manuscript will not be required. Your submission will be acknowledged as soon as possible. 

Exceptions to normal Royal Society of Chemistry policy

Submissions to Chemistry Education Research and Practice do not require a table of contents entry. Submissions to the journal should use Harvard referencing.

Citations in the text should therefore be made by use of the surname of the author(s) and the year of the publication, at the appropriate place. Note that with one or two authors the name(s) are given, while if the source has three or more authors, it is cited with the first named author as 'Author et al. '

When more than one source is cited in the text, they should be listed in chronological and then alphabetical order for example, '(Jones, 2001; Smith, 2001; Adams, 2006)'. The references themselves are given at the end of the final printed text, in alphabetical and, if the same author is cited more than once, chronological order. An example of a journal article reference as it would be presented is Taber K. S., (2015), Advancing chemistry education as a field, Chem. Educ. Res. Pract. , 16 (1), 6–8.

Article types

Chemistry Education Research and Practice  publishes:

Perspectives

Review articles.

Perspectives are short readable articles covering current areas of interest. They may take the form of personal accounts of research or a critical analysis of activity in a specialist area. By their nature, they will not be comprehensive reviews of a field of chemistry. Since the readership of Chemistry Education Research and Practice is wide-ranging, the article should be easily comprehensible to a non-specialist in the field, whilst at the same time providing an authoritative discussion of the area concerned.

We welcome submissions of Perspective articles that:

  • Communicate new challenges or visions for teaching chemistry framed in current chemistry education research or theories with evidence to support claims.
  • Propose frameworks (theoretical, conceptual, curricular), models, pedagogies or practices informed by personal expertise and supported by research outcomes (either the author’s own research or the wider body of education research).
  • Argue theoretical stances accompanied by recommendations for how these can be applied in teaching practice or measured in student conceptualisation of knowledge, with examples.

For more information on Perspective articles please see our 2022 Editorial (DOI: 10.1039/D2RP90006H )

These are normally invited by the Editorial Board and editorial office, although suggestions from readers for topics and authors of reviews are welcome.

Reviews must be high-quality, authoritative, state-of-the-art accounts of the selected research field. They should be timely and add to the existing literature, rather than duplicate existing articles, and should be of general interest to the journal's wide readership.

All Reviews and Perspectives undergo rigorous peer review, in the same way as regular research papers.

Review articles published in Chemistry Education Research and Practice include narrative, integrative or systematic reviews and meta-analyses and should align with the goals and scope of the journal.

Thought experiments outlining a theoretical position or personal opinion without including a literature basis, pedagogical recommendations or evidence of implementation are not considered in the journal.

For more information on preparing a review-style article please see our 2021 Editorial (DOI: 10.1039/D1RP90006D )

Full papers contain original scientific work that has not been published previously.

Comments and Replies are a medium for the discussion and exchange of scientific opinions between authors and readers concerning material published in Chemistry Education Research and Practice. 

For publication, a Comment should present an alternative analysis of and/or new insight into the previously published material. Any Reply should further the discussion presented in the original article and the Comment. Comments and Replies that contain any form of personal attack are not suitable for publication. 

Comments that are acceptable for publication will be forwarded to the authors of the work being discussed, and these authors will be given the opportunity to submit a Reply. The Comment and Reply will both be subject to rigorous peer review in consultation with the journal’s Editorial Board where appropriate. The Comment and Reply will be published together.

Readership information

Chemical education researchers and teachers of chemistry in universities and schools

Subscription information

Chemistry Education Research and Practice is free to access thanks to sponsorship by the Royal Society of Chemistry's Education Division

Online only : ISSN 1756-1108

*2023 Journal Citation Reports (Clarivate Analytics, 2024)

**The median time from submission to first decision including manuscripts rejected without peer review from the previous calendar year

***The median time from submission to first decision for peer-reviewed manuscripts from the previous calendar year

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