| Submission: | Submit Manuscript | Information for Contributors |
| Policies: | General Editorial Policies | Web Posting Guidelines | Author Responsibilities |
| Post Acceptance: | Publication Charges |
| Resources: | |
| Contacts: | Editorial Office | AIP Production |
Information for Contributors
Where to Submit Your Manuscript
Submit manuscripts via Peer X-Press®, the journal's online manuscript submission system, located at http://jrse.peerx-press.org.
Author instructions are available through a link after you successfully log into Peer X-Press®. After registering and submitting information and files, you may use Peer X-Press® to check on the status of your manuscript throughout the peer review process.
Submission Mode: Manuscript materials should be submitted to the journal only in the following manner. Alternatives cannot be routinely accommodated. At least a cover-letter file must be uploaded; no more than one manuscript or article-text file should be uploaded. Via Peer X-Press, upload separate, individual files for the cover letter, article text (including title, byline, abstract, main text, appendices, references, tables, and list of figure captions), and each figure.
A cover letter should specify authors, title, Journal, the corresponding author's e-mail address, and any special requests. Unless otherwise stated, submission of a manuscript will be understood to mean that the paper has been neither copyrighted, classified, published, nor is being considered for publication elsewhere.
A duly signed transfer of copyright agreement form is required for publication in this journal. No claim is made to original U.S. Government works. Upload a signed AIP Transfer of Copyright Agreement Form when submitting your original or revised manuscript to the journal's online submission site (http://jrse.peerx-press.org). See Editorial Office contact information below.
We welcome suggestions of possible reviewers. To help protect the reviewer's anonymity, we ask for at least four names, with full information on postal and e-mail addresses, telephone number, and fax number. The referee selected by the Editor may, of course, not necessarily be from the list.
The Editor strongly prefers to correspond directly with the author, rather than through the reports division or through executives of the author's laboratory. Manuscripts sent to authors for revision should be returned to the Editor within two months. A manuscript returned later than this will generally be regarded as newly submitted and will receive a new receipt date.
Contact the Editorial Office
Contact the Editorial Office for Journal of Renewable and Sustainable Energy at:
Managing Editor
Journal of Renewable and Sustainable Energy Editorial Office
American Institute of Physics
Suite 1NO1
2 Huntington Quadrangle
Melville, NY 11747-4502
USA
E-mail: jrse@aip.org
Tel.: 516-576-2403
Fax: 516-576-2223
Statement of Ethics and Responsibilities of Authors Submitting to AIP Journals
This journal is published as part of the charter of its publisher, the American Institute of Physics (AIP), to advance and diffuse knowledge of the science of physics and its applications to human welfare. To that end, it is essential that all who participate in producing the journal conduct themselves as authors, reviewers, editors, and publishers in accord with the highest level of professional ethics and standards.
A detailed statement of what this journal expects is available here.
By submitting a manuscript to this journal, each author implicitly confirms that it meets the highest ethical standards.
Accepted Manuscripts
Authors whose manuscripts have been accepted for publication will receive correspondence informing them of the issue for which it is tentatively scheduled. Date of publication may be before the cover date of the issue. Authors may access publication data for their manuscripts online through AIP's AMSIS service.
Proofs and all subsequent correspondence pertaining to papers in the production process should be addressed to:
Editorial Supervisor
Journal of Renewable and Sustainable Energy
American Institute of Physics
Suite 1NO1
2 Huntington Quadrangle
Melville, NY 11747-4502, USA
Telephone: 516-576-2416
Fax: 631-396-0060
E-mail: rse@aip.org
Reference must be made to the AIP identification number (e.g., 001901RSE), title, author, and scheduled issue date. A limited number of alterations in proof are unavoidable, but the cost of making extensive alterations after the article has been typeset may be charged to the author. Please do not address correspondence about proofs, reprints, artwork, etc., to the Editor. To do so simply delays the appropriate action and response.
Through AIP's Accepted Manuscript Status Inquiry System (AMSIS), authors may access information about significant milestones for their accepted manuscript during the production process at AIP. AMSIS can be used only by authors of accepted manuscripts; authors will use Peer X-Press® to monitor their submitted manuscripts during peer review.
How to Prepare Your Manuscript
English-Language Editing: Journals published by the American Institute of Physics (AIP) are not able to provide free English-language editing services to authors, but those services are available to authors from several commercial vendors, including American Journal Experts (http://www.journalexperts.com) and SPi Professional Editing Services (http://www.prof-editing.com). Interested authors should contact these service providers directly. Since the AIP Journals have not used either of these commercial services, we cannot attest to the quality of their work.
For general format and style, consult recent issues of the Journal. Link to the journal's General Editorial Policies. Seven types of manuscripts are acceptable: Perspectives, Review Articles, Regular Articles, Letters, Tutorials, Comments, and Errata. For authors who use LaTeX, REVTeX 4.1 is now available and includes style files for AIP journals and associated instructions. REVTeX 4.1 is available here.
For general format and style, consult recent issues of the Journal. Link to the journal's General Editorial Policies. Seven types of manuscripts are acceptable: Perspectives, Review Articles, Regular Articles, Letters, Tutorials, Comments, and Errata.
Perspectives highlight recent exciting research on topics covered by the journal but do not primarily discuss the author’s own work. They may provide context for the findings within a field or explain potential interdisciplinary significance. Perspectives commenting on articles published in the journal or elsewhere should add a dimension to the current understanding and not merely be a summary of the results presented in those articles.
Review Articles describe new developments of interdisciplinary significance and highlight unresolved questions and future directions. A review article critically discusses recent published results within the scope of the chosen topic. Most Review Articles are solicited by the editors, but unsolicited submissions may also be considered.
Regular Articles are unsolicited manuscripts describing original research on a topic within the scope of the journal. While there is no limitation on the length of these articles, they are expected to be of reasonable length and referees are asked to comment explicitly on the concision of the presentation.
Letters, brief and concise, discuss recently published material in the journal or issues of general interest. Whether published in full or in part, letters are subject to editing for clarity.
Tutorials guide readers into rapidly evolving topics and allow interested researchers and students from more distant fields to gain an insight into what they see as a new subject. Tutorials must contain considerable illustrations, cover the basics, and should serve as a learning tool for a wider community of researchers and students. Tutorials can also be based on an outstanding lecture series.
Comments. The purpose of a Comment is to correct significant errors in articles published in the journal, to take issue with the conclusions reached, or to provide additional insight or corroboration. Comments must be concise, substantive, and free of polemics. They must address scientific issues only. The Editors reserve the right to seek any appropriate responses from authors and will decide on the acceptance of Comments for publication only after the two parties have submitted final versions of their pieces.
Errata. The Journal publishes errata, in which authors correct significant errors of substance in their published material. Errata should be as short as is consistent with clarity.
For all manuscript types, the Manuscript, including the abstract, references, and captions, should be set up for 21.6 × 28 cm (8-1/2 × 11 in. or A4) pages with ample margins. It should be carefully proofread by the author. The manuscript must be in good scientific American English; this is the author's responsibility. Number all pages in single sequence. The title page should contain the title of the article, the names of the authors, a suitable byline, and a short abstract. Parts of the manuscript should be arranged in the following order: title, author, affiliation, abstract, text, acknowledgments, appendices, and references. Papers should not be lengthened by unnecessary descriptions and repetitions, but neither should authors use a telegraphic style detrimental to the clarity and understanding of the paper.
The Title should be as concise as possible but sufficiently informative to describe the subject under discussion.
The Abstract should be self-contained (contain no footnotes). One should not have to read the paper to understand the abstract. It should be about 5% of the length of the article, but less than 500 words. The abstract should be written as one paragraph and should not contain displayed mathematical equations or tabular material.
Authors' names should preferably be written in a standard form for all publications to facilitate indexing and avoid ambiguities.
Beginning on 1 January 2009, authors with Chinese, Japanese, or Korean names may choose to have their names published in their own language alongside the English versions of their names in the author list of their publications. For Chinese, authors may use either Simplified or Traditional characters. Chinese, Japanese, or Korean characters must be included within the author list of the manuscript when submitting or resubmitting. The manuscript must be prepared using Microsoft Word or using the CJK LaTeX package. Specific guidelines for each authoring tool are given here. To ensure that we have processed the manuscript files correctly, you must proof the PDF of the manuscript as produced by the Peer X-Press system on first submission. In addition, it is essential that you check carefully any production proofs you receive prior to the publication of your paper.
The manuscript should have an Introduction that places the work in a context, beginning with the general physical or mathematical problem to which it is directed, following with the motivation for the particular approach taken, and summarizing the principal results.
Equations should be well aligned and should not be crowded; only the more important ones should be numbered on the right-hand side of the manuscript. Equations should be numbered consecutively throughout, i.e., (1), (2), (3), etc. [The form (1.1), (1.2), etc., in Sec. I, (2.1), (2.2), etc., in Sec. II, and so on is acceptable, but not preferred.] Several equations grouped together may be given letters to distinguish them [for example, (2a), (2b), (2c)]. A later, somewhat changed version of an earlier equation may be labeled with a prime [for example, (1), (2), (3), (1'), (4), etc.]. Other numbering schemes are unacceptable and will be changed. Use center dot only to indicate dot products and a boldfaced cross (×) to indicate a cross product. Use a lightface cross product (×) to indicate multiplication which is continued to the next line. The solidus (/) should be used instead of built-up fractions in running text, and in display wherever clarity would not be jeopardized. Use "exp" for complicated exponents. Avoid repetition of a complicated expression by representing it with a standard, commonly used symbol.
Notation must be legible, clear, compact, and consistent with standard usage. All unusual symbols whose identity may not be obvious must be identified the first time they appear, and at all subsequent times when confusion might arise. Superscripts are normally set directly over subscripts; authors should note where readability or the meaning requires a special order.
References and footnotes are treated alike. They must be numbered consecutively in order of first appearance in the text and should be given in a separate double-spaced list at the end of the text material. Reference should be made to the full list of authors, rather than to first author followed by an abbreviation such as et al. References within tables should be designated by lowercase Roman letter superscripts and given at the end of the table. For the proper form, see recent issues of this journal. Preprints of cited unpublished work by the authors should be sent with the manuscript.
Separate Tables (numbered with Roman numerals in the order of their appearance in the text) should be used for all but the simplest tabular material; they should have captions that make the tables intelligible without reference to the text. The structure should be clear, with simple column headings giving all units. Unaltered computer output and notation are generally unacceptable.
Author Guidelines for Multimedia Submissions
Multimedia files can be included in the online version of published papers. These multimedia files can be viewed by simply clicking on a link in the paper, provided the reader has a video player, such as Windows Media Player™, QuickTime Player™, or RealOne Player™ installed.
Please adhere to the following guidelines when preparing multimedia files for submission:
• When incorporating multimedia, note that the paper should be written so that the print version can be understood on its own. • Submit all multimedia files initially with the manuscript. • Treat all multimedia files as figures, numbered in sequence as they are referred to in text. (Multimedia files will not have a numbering scheme separate from the figures.) • All multimedia files must be cited in the text, referred to by their figure number. • For each multimedia file, provide a figure, which is a static representation of the multimedia file. Also provide an accompanying caption. At the end of the caption, include the phrase, "(enhanced online)." • Video and other enhanced files should be in a format that the majority of readers can view without too much difficulty. See the multimedia guidelines below for specific submission requirements.
Video Submissions
Acceptable file formats include QuickTime nonstreaming video (.qt or .mov), MPEG (.mpg), and DV (.dv). The preferred formats are .mov, and .mpg. Details about each of these file formats are outlined below. Note that AVI files are no longer a recommended file format, because the wide variety of AVI codecs cannot be reliably archived.
Authors must insert a representative “still” image, taken from the video, in the manuscript as a figure. This still image is not intended to convey meaning about the content of the video; rather it will be used as a static representation of the video file, which will be linked online after acceptance. Care should be taken to extract an image from the video which has reasonable clarity of fine lines and details. Acceptable file formats for still images are JPEG (.jpg) and GIF (.gif).
Audio Submissions
Acceptable file formats include PCM (.pcm), WAV (.wav), AIFF (.aif), and MP3 (.mp3) at 128 kbit/s or greater.
General Guidelines for All Multimedia Submissions
Authors are strongly encouraged to adhere to the following guidelines when preparing multimedia files:
• The acceptable file formats outlined above are playable using standard media players, such as QuickTime and Windows Media Player. Media players should be used to check file properties and image/sound quality prior to submission. For video submissions, fonts, lines, and image details should be of sufficient size and weight to be visible when played at half size. • Attention should be paid to the file size to make download time reasonable since streaming formats are not acceptable for submission at this time. A recommended target size for each multimedia file is 3–5 MB. • Authors are encouraged to use one of the accepted compression codecs to minimize file sizes. • Animations must be formatted into a standard video file.
Multimedia Metadata
Authors will be asked to provide some information about their multimedia files. A caption or description of the content of the media file is required (similar to a typical figure caption). Additional metadata as outlined below will also be requested. This information is optional.
Metadata Elements:
• Caption/description: Textual caption/description of the content of media object. Required. • Type: The nature or genre of the content of the media, such as video or audio. Optional. • Format: This should describe the media filetype, such as QuickTime, DV, MPEG, PCM, or WAV. Optional. • Duration: This is the duration of the media object playing time, in units of seconds. It is applicable to video or audio media. Optional. • Frame size: For video only (not still images), the size of the video image, as height × width in pixels. Optional. • Producer: Information about the software used to create the media object. It should include the name and version of the software (e.g., Adobe Premiere Elements v. 2.0). Optional.
Multimedia Detailed Specifications
Acceptable Video File Formats:
•QuickTime nonstreaming (.qt or .mov) o24 bit (millions) color oVideo Compressor/Codec •Uncompressed/None •Animation •Motion JPEG (MJPEG) •DV—NTSC •DV—PAL oAudio •48,000 samples per second •16 bit •Uncompressed/PCM •Stereo or Mono •MPEG oVideo Compressor/Codec •MPEG2 (.mpg) •MPEG4 (.mpg or .mp4) oVideo data rate 6 MB or greater oAudio •48,000 samples per second •16 bit •Uncompressed (PCM) or MPEG Audio at 224 kbit/s or greater •DV (.dv) oDV NTSC oDV PAL
NTSC Video Parameters:
•Image size (H:V) 720:480 pixels •Frame rate 29.97 frames per second
PAL Video Parameters:
•Image size (H:V) 720:576 pixels •Frame rate 25 frames per second
Acceptable Audio File Formats:
•PCM, WAV, AIFF, MP3 (at 128 kbit/s or greater) oAudio Parameters •44,100 or 48,000 samples per second •16 bit •Stereo or Mono
Supplemental Material
Supplemental files may be of two types:
| • | Files to aid the reviewer and not for publication. |
| • | Supplementary information for publication alongside the manuscript (as an EPAPS deposit). |
Electronic Physics Auxiliary Publication Service (EPAPS) is a free electronic depository for material that is supplemental to a journal article. Appropriate items for deposit include multimedia (e.g., movie files, audio files, 3D rendering files), data tables, and text (e.g., appendices) that are too lengthy or of too limited interest for inclusion in the article. Links (URLs) in the online (printed) journal article allow users to navigate directly to the associated EPAPS deposit.
All deposits to EPAPS must be approved by the Journal Editor as part of a manuscript's normal review cycle, and must be listed in the reference section as follows: "See EPAPS supplementary material at [URL will be inserted by AIP] for [give brief description of material]."
For additional information about depositing or retrieving EPAPS files, see the EPAPS homepage.
How to Prepare Your Illustrations
Please adhere to the following guidelines when preparing your illustrations for submission.
General Guidelines for Preparing Illustrations:
• Number figures in the order in which they appear in text. • Label all figure parts with (a), (b), etc. Avoid any large disparity in size of lettering and labels used within one illustration. • Prepare illustrations in the final published size, not oversized. The maximum published width for an illustration in JRSE is 6-3/4 inches (17 cm). Each illustration should be prepared for 100% reproduction in order to avoid problems arising from large reductions in size. • In cases where reduction is required, avoid small open symbols that tend to fill in and avoid small lettering; ensure that, in the final published illustration, there is a minimum of 8-point type size (2.8 mm high; 1/8 inch high) for lettering and 0.5-point width for lines. • Ensure that lettering and lines are dark enough, and thick enough, to reproduce clearly, especially if reduction is necessary. Remember that fine lines tend to disappear upon reduction.
Additional Guidelines for Preparation of Electronic Graphics Files:
• Acceptable formats: PostScript (.ps), Encapsulated PostScript (.eps, using either Arial or Times Roman fonts), Tagged Image File Format (.tif, lzw compressed), or Portable Document Format (.pdf). Application files (e.g., Corel Draw, Microsoft Word) are not acceptable. • When submitting your manuscript, submit ALL illustrations for your paper, including line art. • Make sure there is only ONE figure per file. Each figure file should contain all parts of the figure. For example, if Figure 1 contains three parts (a, b, c), then all parts should be combined in a single file for Figure 1. • Set the correct orientation for each graphics file. • Settings: Set the graphic for 600 dpi resolution for line art, 264 dpi for halftones, and 600 dpi for combinations (line art + halftone). • Save line art as black/white bitmap, not grayscale. • Save halftones and combinations as grayscale, not black/white bitmap. • Submit color files at 300 dpi TIFF, PS, or EPS format. If selecting a file mode, use CMYK (cyan, magenta, yellow, black) or RGB (red, green, blue).
Special Instructions for Creating a Production-Ready PDF Illustration:
For accepted manuscripts, PDF as the source file for illustrations is not preferred. However, properly prepared PDF illustration files may be used in the production process of your accepted manuscript if you adhere to the following guidelines:
• PDF should only be used as the source file for illustrations when the preferred formats (PS, EPS, or TIF) cannot be generated. • In the PDF illustration, the resolution of any shaded or photographic images must be 600 pixels per inch (PPI). • Within the PDF illustration, resolution of line art with no shading should be 1200 pixels per inch (PPI). • All fonts must be embedded in the PDF. • When creating a PDF through your application's print command, select "High Quality Print". • Link to more detailed instructions here.
Manuscript Preparation Checklist
Use this checklist to avoid the most common mechanical errors in submitted manuscripts:
1. The manuscript must be double-spaced throughout. 2. Number all pages in single sequence. 3. Type references in the style used by this journal. 4. Submit cover letter, manuscript file, illustration files, and any supplemental files via Peer X-Press, the journal's online submission system, located at http://jrse.peerx-press.org. 5. The original figures must be in the final published size, not oversized. 6. Upload a signed AIP Transfer of Copyright Agreement Form when submitting your original or revised manuscript to the journal's online submission site (http://jrse.peerx-press.org). A blank copyright form is available here.
Publication Charges
Page Charges
The American Institute of Physics does not require page charges for Journal of Renewable and Sustainable Energy.
Inquiries concerning page charges and "other" fees should be addressed to:
Publication Page Charge & Reprints
American Institute of Physics
Suite 1NO1
2 Huntington Quadrangle
Melville, NY 11747-4502
USA
Telephone: 1-800-344-6909 (U.S.& Canada) or 516-576-2270
Fax: 516-349-9704
E-mail: pcr@aip.org
Color Printing
Illustrations will appear in color in the online journal free of charge to authors. To take advantage of this free service, authors must (i) supply usable color graphics files (.eps, .ps, .tif, or .pdf only), (ii) transmit graphics files in time for utilization during the production process.
General Editorial Policies
The purpose of Journal of Renewable and Sustainable Energy (JRSE) is to publish papers dealing with one or more of the multiple sub areas of renewable and sustainable energy. The sub areas covered by the journal are, solar power, including photovoltaics and solar cooling technologies; fuel cells; energy storage devices, such as batteries, supercapacitors; biofuels, including sources like ethanol, biodiesel, and anaerobic digestion and gasification of biomaterials; nuclear power, including fusion and fission research; wind energy; geothermal energy; mechanical and thermal energy from the ocean; and hydropower.
JRSE is published by the American Institute of Physics (AIP); content is published online daily, collected into a bimonthly online issue (6 issues per year). The Editors are responsible for the scientific content and other editorial matters pertaining to the Journal.
If the editors judge it to fall within the scope of the Journal, the submitted manuscript is sent to an expert referee for evaluation, and if necessary to another reviewer for a second opinion. The identities of such referees remain confidential. On the basis of the report, the Editors make a decision either to accept the paper for publication, to reject it, or to ask the author for revisions suggested by the referee. Revised versions should be sent to the editorial office in a timely manner, or else the original receipt date may be replaced.
A paper published in JRSE should be written in clear and standard English and its mathematics formulated precisely, in a manner understandable to physicists. It should be concise, though not to the point of being incomprehensible; relevant background information should be provided when necessary without dominating the paper. Its content has to be not only scientifically and logically correct, as well as novel, but of interest at least to the appropriate community of specialists rather than to the author(s) alone. Papers the editors deem of insufficient interest to the renewable energy community will be rejected without refereeing. (For further details, see Information for Contributors.)
Journal of Renewable and Sustainable Energy requests a signed copyright-transfer form, assigning the copyright to the American Institute of Physics, to be included with each submission. Submission to JRSE implies that the work has not been submitted, copyrighted, nor accepted for publication elsewhere. Since this form is required before publication, supplying it initially can prevent unnecessary delays.
Authors who disagree with the Editors' decision to reject their paper may appeal. If the disagreement cannot be resolved after consulting the original referee and, if necessary, another reviewer, the arguments of both sides will be presented to the Editorial Board for their judgment. As a final resort, an author may appeal the decision by making a request to the Editors that the case be reviewed by the Executive Director of AIP. The Executive Director will not make direct decisions whether or not a paper should be accepted for publication, but rather will assess whether procedures were followed properly. Additional rounds of review or adjudication would be called for only if proper procedures were not followed.
