INSTRUCTIONS FOR AUTHORS
Types of paper
(a) Research Papers: these papers are fully documented,
interpreted accounts of significant findings of original research. Authors
should aim for no more than eight figures per paper. Any non-essential figures
can be included in the Supplementary Material (see Supplementary Material
section below). Papers not conforming to these guidelines may be rejected, at
the Editor's discretion.
(b) Review Papers: these are critical and comprehensive reviews
that provide new insights or interpretation of a subject through thorough and
systematic evaluation of available evidence. We would not expect to receive a
review paper that is shorter than 8000 words.
(c) Mini Review: these are short, timely articles that summarise
recent developments in a field without providing an exhaustive review of all
the literature. We encourage Mini-Reviews which propose provocative new ideas
or which challenge currently accepted opinions. We would expect a Mini Review
to be around 3000 words. Section headings should be short and informative. No
more than four figures should be included.
(d) Commentaries should normally take the form of a ‘letter’ and
present significant comments or questions about a work published in the
Journal. A commentary would normally include substantiated disagreement with,
or alternative interpretation of, one or more aspects of a paper. It would also
normally discuss associated implications for the conclusions reached.
Commentaries should be received within 3 months of the publication date of the
paper on which they comment. Authors of potential discussions are encouraged to
enter into communication with the Editor-in-Chief before preparation or
submission of text. While there is no word limit, commentaries should be brief
and tightly focused. A commentary, if accepted, will normally be shared with
the authors of the paper concerned who will be provided opportunity to respond.
If needed, a template on how to format your paper can be found
here.
Science World Publishing Journals accept original research
articles, reviews, communications, cases reports, case studies, opinions,
editorials, perspectives and letters for publication. Authors are requested to
follow the guiding principles before submission of the articles to the Science
World Publishing journals.
Ethics in publishing
You will be required to accept the Science World Publishing Ethics
Statement for Authors when you submit your paper to the journal. The statement
covers authorship, originality and conflicts of interest. Please read this
statement to ensure your submission complies.
Note that conference proceedings are a form of publication.
CHANGES TO AUTHORSHIP
If you wish to add, delete or rearrange the authors of your
accepted paper:
Before online publication: The corresponding author should contact
the Journals Manager, and provide (a) the reason for the change, and (b) the
written consent of all co-authors, including the authors being added or
removed. Please note that your paper will not be published until the changes
have been agreed.
After online publication: Any requests to add, delete, or
rearrange author names in an article published in an online issue will follow
the same policies as noted above and result in a corrigendum.
COPYRIGHT
If your paper is selected for publication you will be expected to
sign our copyright assignment form. Where necessary you must obtain permission
to publish material protected by copyright. Provision is made on the form for
work performed for the United States Government (for which Copyright cannot be
assigned) and other extenuating circumstances.
For open access articles: Upon acceptance of an article, authors
will be asked to complete an 'Exclusive License Agreement' (for more information
see our Rights and Permissions page). Permitted third party reuse of open
access articles is determined by the author's choice of user license. More
information is available on our Open Access page.
AUTHOR RIGHTS
For the rights of the author to reuse your work, please refer to
the Rights and Permissions page.
ROLE OF THE FUNDING SOURCE
You are requested to identify who provided financial support for
the conduct of the research and/or preparation of the article and to briefly
describe the role of the sponsor(s), if any, in study design; in the
collection, analysis and interpretation of data; in the writing of the report;
and in the decision to submit the article for publication. If the funding
source(s) had no such involvement then this should be stated.
PUBLISHING OPTIONS
If your paper is accepted for publication, you will be able to
choose from two publication options.
Open Access papers are freely available on science world
publishing
Usage of papers published open access by third parties is defined
by the type of Creative Commons user licence selected by the author (see all
options on our Open Access page).
A fee is payable to publish your paper Open Access. Please see our
Open Access Fees page for more information.
Readers without a subscription can pay a one-off fee to download
the paper.
LANGUAGE
Papers must be in good, grammatically correct English. If your
paper cannot be understood, it will be rejected. If English is not your native
language, you should seek the assistance of a colleague or professional
translator.
In addition, you should always have your manuscript read by at
least two other people to avoid typing errors before submitting to a journal.
SUBMISSION
Articles should be provided in electronic form (uploaded to our
online submission site
https://scienceworldpublishing.org/article-submission.php and comply with the instructions below.
REVIEWERS
You are required to submit, with the manuscript, the names and
addresses of 3 potential reviewers that can give an independent review. You should
make sure that these reviewers are not within your institution and where
possible use reviewers from different countries. If in doubt please look at
your references.
REVISION
Major corrections cannot be undertaken by either the editor or the
publishers; if your paper is not prepared in accordance with these instructions
it may not be considered further. Where requested to do so in the course of the
peer review process, authors must revise their papers within one month of the
request; otherwise the contribution will be considered withdrawn.
PEER REVIEW PROCESS
All papers that an Editor sends for review, will be peer reviewed,
you can see the full process. More information on how to review a paper can be
found.
PREPARATION
Use of word processing software
The preferred format for electronic versions is Microsoft Word,
though we can accept most other word-processing packages in PC or Macintosh
formats; however, please do not supply your typescript as a PDF. Authors should
not add their own macros. Please supply only the final version of your file
(with no hidden text), to avoid any risk of old versions of the text being used
in error.
The source files of figures are required if a paper is accepted
and you should embed the figures in the main text (see below).
Article structure
Do not number or letter section headings.
Use line numbering throughout your paper.
Papers should be well structured; they must comprise:
•         Title
•         Short title of no
more than 80 characters
•         Author name(s),
full postal and email addresses for each author. Please indicate who the
corresponding author is.
•         Abstract: no more
than 200 words briefly specifying the aims of the work, the main results
obtained, and the conclusions drawn. Citations must not be included in the
Abstract.
•         Keywords: up to 6
keywords (in alphabetical order) which will enable subsequent abstracting or
information retrieval systems to locate the paper.
•         Highlights: up to
5 numbered points which describe the novelty and/or the impact of your
research. The highlights should help increase the discoverability of your
article. Ensure the highlights are, concise, easy to read, and include key
search terms (you should not simply rewrite the abstract).
•         Graphical
Abstract: this should offer readers an at-a-glance visualisation of your paper
via a single, concise image. Graphical abstracts are optional, but helpful for
readers and for the promotion of your paper.
Main text: for clarity this should be subdivided into:
•         Introduction:
describing the background of the work and its aims.
•         Methods: a brief
description of the methods/techniques used (the principles of these methods
should not be described if readers can be directed to easily accessible references
or standard texts).
•         Results and
Discussion: a clear presentation of experimental results obtained, highlighting
any trends or points of interest.
•         Conclusions: a
brief explanation of the significance and implications of the work reported.
•         References: these
should be to accessible sources. Please ensure that all work cited in the text
is included in the reference list, and that the dates and authors given in the
text match those in the reference list. References must always be given in
sufficient detail for the reader to locate the work cited (see below for
formats). Note that your paper is at risk of rejection if there are too few
(<10) or too many (>25) references, or if a disproportionate share of the
references cited are your own.
Supplementary Material: Appendices and other Supplementary
Material are permitted, and will be published online only.
Data: We encourage authors to make the dataset on which their
paper is based available to access. Authors may upload all data related to the
results reported in the manuscript as supplementary materials with the
submission, or provided via a URL to a public repository. Data should be presented in a format that
facilitates readability and reuse.
Where restrictions apply, submissions should be accompanied by a
statement of the conditions of access and permitted reuse of the data.
For Review Papers the organisation of the paper can be different.
It is however important that a review is more than a summary of the literature;
an in-depth critical discussion is essential for acceptance of a review paper.
Nomenclature and Units
Please take care that all terminology and notation used will be
widely understood. Abbreviations and acronyms should be spelled out in full at
their first occurrence in the text. In describing wastewater treatment
processes authors should consult Corominas et al. (2010). New framework for
standardized notation in wastewater treatment modelling. Water Science &
Technology, 61(4), 841-857.
SI units are strongly recommended. If non-SI units must be used,
SI equivalents (or conversion factors) must also be given. Please use the
spellings 'litre' and 'metre' (a 'meter' is a measuring instrument).
Please use a decimal point rather than a comma in numbers (i.e.
3.142 not 3,142).
Write equations in dimensionless form or in metric units. Please
use italic letters to denote variables (in text or in displayed equations).
Artwork
All figures should be embedded and correctly positioned within
your Word files, and should also be supplied as separate graphics files in
their original formats. EPS, TIFF or PSD formats are preferred.
The journal is printed in black and white, with colour graphics in
the online version. Authors can have figures printed in colour at a cost of
£350 per figure.
Figures should appear in numerical order, be described in the body
of the text and be positioned close to where they are first cited. Each figure
should have a caption which describes the illustration, and that can be
understood independently of the main text. The caption should be given in the
text, and not on the figure itself.
Make sure all figures and tables will fit inside the text area.
Because figures may be resized in the course of production please
use scale bars and not magnification factors.
Tables
Please submit tables as editable text and not as images. Number
tables consecutively in accordance with their appearance in the text and place
any table notes below the table body. Be sparing in the use of tables and
ensure that the data presented in them do not duplicate results described
elsewhere in the article. Please avoid using vertical rules.
REFERENCES
Citations in text
Use surname of author and year of publication: Jones (2002) or
(Jones 2002).
Insert initials only if there are two different authors with the
same surname and same year of publication.
Two or more years in parentheses following an author's name are
cited in ascending order of year, and two or more references published in the
same year by the same author are differentiated by letters a, b, c, etc. For
example: Brown (1999, 2002, 2003a, b).
Different references cited together should be in date order, for
example: (Smith 1959; Thomson & Jones 2008; Green 2015).
If a paper has been accepted for publication but has not been
published the term "(in press)" should be used instead of a date.
If a paper has been submitted but not definitely accepted the term
"(submitted)" should be used. If the paper is still being prepared
the term "(in preparation)" should be used.
The abbreviation "et al." should be used in the text
when there are more than two co-authors of a cited paper.
Please double-check: every citation in the text must match up to
an entry in the reference list and vice-versa.
REFERENCE LINKS
We use digital object identifiers (DOIs) to link references to the
source material. This can only be done if the data provided in the references
are correct. Please be very careful, especially when copying references, to
ensure that surnames, journal/book titles, publication year and pagination are
all correct. Please include DOIs where available.
LIST OF REFERENCES
References should be listed alphabetically at the end of the
paper. Although "et al." is preferable in the text, in the list of
references all authors should be given.
JOURNAL REFERENCE STYLE:
Zeng RJ, Lemaire R, Yuan Z, Keller J. A novel wastewater treatment
process: simultaneous nitrification, denitrification and phosphorus removal.
Water Science and Technology, 2004;50(10):163-170.
Book reference styles - (i) article in compilation; (ii) multi-author
work; (iii) standard reference; (iv) report; (v) thesis:
(i) McInerney M. J. 1999 Anaerobic metabolism and its regulation.
In: Biotechnology, J. Winter (ed.), 2nd edn, Wiley-VCH Verlag, Weinheim,
Germany, pp. 455-478.
(ii) Henze M., Harremoës P., LaCour Jansen J. & Arvin E. 1995
Wastewater Treatment: Biological and Chemical Processes. Springer, Heidelberg.
(iii) Standard Methods for the Examination of Water and Wastewater
1998 20th edn, American Public Health Association/American Water Works Association/Water
Environment Federation, Washington DC, USA.
(iv) Sobsey M. D. & Pfaender F. K. 2002 Evaluation of the H2S
method for Detection of Fecal Contamination of Drinking Water, Report
WHO/SDE/WSH/02.08, Water Sanitation and Health Programme, WHO, Geneva,
Switzerland.
(v) Bell J. 2002 Treatment of Dye Wastewaters in the Anaerobic
Baffled Reactor and Characterisation of the Associated Microbial Populations.
PhD thesis, Pollution Research Group, University of Natal, Durban, South
Africa.
SUBMISSION CHECKLIST
The following list will be useful during the final checking of an
article prior to sending it to the journal for review. Please consult this
Instruction for Authors for further details of any item.
Ensure that the following items are present:
One author has been designated as the corresponding author with
contact details:
• E-mail address
• Full postal address
• All co-author E-mail addresses for verification
All necessary files have been uploaded, and contain:
• Keywords
• All figure captions
• All tables (including title, description, footnotes)
FURTHER CONSIDERATIONS
• Manuscript has been 'spell-checked' and 'grammar-checked'
• References are in the correct format for this journal
• All references mentioned in the Reference list are cited in the
text, and vice versa
• Permission has been obtained for use of copyrighted material
from other sources (including the Internet)
Printed version of figures (if applicable) in colour or black and
white
• Indicate clearly whether or not colour or black and white in
print is required
• For reproduction in black and white, please supply black and
white versions of the figures for printing purposes if necessary
AFTER ACCEPTANCE
Use of the Digital Object Identifier
The DOI is a unique set of letters and numbers which can be used
to cite and link to your paper online. The DOI is assigned to your paper when
the first proof is generated, and it will not change, meaning you can cite an
Uncorrected Proof immediately using the DOI.
Proofs
Proofs will be sent by e-mail to the listed corresponding author.
Any corrections must be returned within one week of receipt and should only
cover typesetting errors. All corrections must be returned to us in one
communication. Proofreading is the sole responsibility of the authors.
Offprints
Upon publication, the Corresponding Author will receive an
electronic file of the paper. Additionally, hardcopy offprints can be ordered
using the Offprint Order Form, available from Science World Publishing on
request.
Article Processing Fees: Click
Here