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21. |
Copyright licence |
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Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry,
Volume 10,
Issue 1,
1995,
Page 74-75
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摘要:
I COPYRIGHT LICENCE I Since April 1st 1994 all authors submitting work for publication in Royal Society of Chemistry journals have been required to sign an exclusive copyright licence to formalise the agreement with the Society. The form is reproduced overleaf and may be photocopied; it will also be reproduced in future as part of Instruction for Authors in the January issues of the journals. All future submissions of papers for publication should be accompanied by a completed form without which publication cannot proceed.Paper no (inserted by office) EXCLUSIVE COPYRIGHT LICENCE Authors submitting manuscripts for publication in Royal Society of Chemis manuscript a copy of this form duly completed. Please type or use BLOCK?APITALS. 1 Journals are requested to read the notes below and to enclose with the Journal to which the manuscript is submitted Name of Author Address Title of Contribution 2 To be completed if the author(s) is(are) the owner(s) of copyright in the Contribution In consideration of the publication in a Royal Society of Chemistry Journal of the above Contribution I hereby assign to the Royal Society of Chemistry an Exclusive Licence in respect of the copyright in the Contribution for the full legal term of copyright throughout the world in all formats and through any medium of communication. Signed (on behalf of hidherself and of all the authors of the Contribution) Date 3 To be completed if the author(s) is(are) not the owner(s) of copyright in the Contribution In consideration of the publication in a Royal Society of Chemistry Journal of the above Contribution I as the authorised representative of the employer of the author(s) of the Contribution hereby assign to the Royal Society of Chemistry the publishers an Exclusive Licence in respect of the copyright in the Contribution for the full legal term of copyright throughout the world in all formats and through any medium of communication sub’ect to reservation to of the right to reproduce the Contribution at any time for internal purposes.All intel/ectual property rights other than copyright are reserved. Signed Date Name Employer CONDITIONS OF PUBLICATION To be completed if you are the owner of copyright in the Contribution I warrant to the Royal Society of Chemistry that the Contribution is my original work has not been published before that I have obtained all necessary Vmissions for the reproduction as part of the Contribution of copyright works (including artistic works eg photographs charts maps etc) not owned y me that the Contribution contains no illegal statements and does not infringe any nghts of others and agree to indemnify the Royal Society of Chemistry against any claims in respect of the above warranties.Signed Date To be completed if you are not the owner of copyright in the Contribution I as the authorised representative of the employer of the author of the Contribution warrant to the Royal Society of Chemistry that all necessary permissions have been obtained for the reproduction as part of the contribution of copyright works (includin artistic works eg photographs charts maps etc) not owned by the em loyer that the Contribution contains no illegal statements and does not inknge any rights of others and agree to indemnify the Royal Society of &emistry against any claims in respect of the above warranties. Signed Date Name Employer Copyright notes for contributors 1 The Society’s policy is to acquire an Exclusive Licence in respect of the copyright in all contributions.There are two reasons for this (a) control of copyright by the publisher ensures maximum protection against piratical infringement anywhere in the world; (b) it also ensures that y t s by third arties to reprint a contribution or part of it are handled efficiently in accordance with our general policy which encourages dissemination of knowle ge inside the gamework of copynght.2 We will not withhold permission for any reasonable request from you to publish the whole or any art of your Contribution in connection with any other work by you provided the usual acknowledgements are given regarding copyright notice and reference to first pubication by us. 3 The Royal Society of Chemistry is a si atory of the STM Guidelines on PenniFsions whereb the Societ has agreed to a standard rocedure for granting permission for the reproduction of copyright materi$especially figures and similar illustrations) from the Zocie s ubcations b other bona&e publishers without c-e and without reference to the onginal authors except where the quantity of material to be ?produced is judge%o & unreasonabry large. A standard condibon of such pemssion is that the original authors and the source are acknowledged.Accordingly the Society will not normally refer to you requests for permission to reproduce figures tables etc from your contribution and you are requested to forward to the Society any requests for frmission which you receive from other authors or thelr publishers in respect of this contribution. The Society believes that this procedure protects Authors’ interests wit out adding an excessive amount of bureaucracy. 4 The Journal mandates the Copyright Licensing Agency in the UK which offers centralised licensing arrangements for photocopying in the UK and has reciprocal arrangements with licensing agencies in other countnes. 5 The Contribution may be stored by electronic (including digital) means by us and then transmitted to meet individual requests. 6 You hereby agree to the journal making the necessary arrangements to include the Contribution in a document delivery service. 7 If you are a US Government employee and the Contribution was made in that capacity the assignment applies only to the extent allowable by US law. 8 If ou ateman employee of the British Government then HMSO will as standard practice grant a non-exclusive licence to publish this paper in the journal in any form or meJa provided Bntxh crown copynght is reserved. 9 If the Contribution is not accepted for publication by the Society this Exclusive Licence is null and void.
ISSN:0267-9477
DOI:10.1039/JA9951000074
出版商:RSC
年代:1995
数据来源: RSC
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22. |
Guidelines for submission on disk |
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Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry,
Volume 10,
Issue 1,
1995,
Page 76-77
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摘要:
Royal Society of Chemistry Journals Department Guidelines for submission on disk These guidelines should be used in conjunction with the Instructions for Authors by authors wishing to submit a copy of their manuscript in electronic form. Successful utilization of data on disk avoids duplication of effort and introduction of typographical error during typesetting. The following points should be noted during preparation of the manuscript to allow us to make the best use of the data provided. Hardcopy - copies of the manuscript to be submitted in the usual way - Submission on disk should accompany the revised version of the manuscript such that the hardcopy to be edited and the data on the disk are identical Disk - formatted for IBM (or compatible) PC or Macintosh - either 3.25 or 5.25" - clearly labelled (author name word processor type file format and file names) - accompanied on submission with a disk description form Data - text MS-Word Word for Windows Wordperfect and WordStar files accepted Text - double spaced - unjustified - ranged left - not hyphenated Paragraphs - no indent on first line - separated by carriage return Spaces - single spaces only after all punctuation including h l l point Characters - note distinction between ell (1) and one (1) and upper case oh (0) and zero (0) Tables - include at the end of the text file - use either the word processor's table editor or tabs for formatting but not a mixture of the two Consistency - check the manuscript carefully for consistency particularly in the representation of chemical formulae compound names and words with alternative spellings Use of the data supplied either in whole or in part cannot be guaranteed.Mathematical equations and tables in particular may be rekeyed by the typesetter. Page proofs should be checked in the usual way. The Royal Society of Chemistry holds personal information on a computerized database for publications administration purposes. We may from time to time wish to send you material relevant to your research interests to provide information about the Society's products or possibly to seek your advice on new products. If you do not wish to receive this or remain on our mailing list please contact the Journals Administration Officer. 76Royal Society of Chemistry Journals Department Authors’ Diskette Submission Details We welcome the submission of the text of your paper on a diskette in any of the formats listed below. If you wish to do this please complete this form with the required information and return it with your diskette to the editorial office. Please ensure that the diskette is clearly labelled with your name a short title of the paper and the hardware and software used. The data on the diskette must correspond exactly to the final hardcopy version supplied. Therefore please only supply disks with revised manuscripts. Journal Paper ref. no. Author name Paper title Disk details Hardware PC Macintosh Software (text) MS-Word version Word for Windows version Word Perfect version Wo rdst a r version File names (text) Office use only Receipt date (disk) virus checked
ISSN:0267-9477
DOI:10.1039/JA9951000076
出版商:RSC
年代:1995
数据来源: RSC
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23. |
Refereeing procedure and policy |
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Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry,
Volume 10,
Issue 1,
1995,
Page 78-80
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摘要:
JOURNALS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF CHEMISTRY Refereeing Procedure and Policy (I 995) 1.0 Contributions to Dalton Perkin and Faraday Transactions J. Mater. Chem. The Analyst J. Anal. At. Spectrom. and J. Chem. Research 1.1 Introduction This document summarises the procedure used for assessing papers submitted to the four Transactions J. Mater. Chem. The Analyst J. Anal. At. Spectrom. and J. Chem. Research and provides guidelines for referees engaged in this assessment. 1.2 Subject Matter Papers are submitted to the various journals according to subject matter. If it is felt that a paper would be published more appropriately in an RSC journal other than the one suggested by the author the referee should inform the Editor. The topics covered by the various journals are as follows. Dalton Transactions (Inorganic Chemistry).All aspects of the chemistry of inorganic and organometallic compounds including bioinorganic chemistry and solid-state inorganic chemistry; the applications of physicochemical techniques to the study of their structures properties and reactions including kinetics and mechanism; new or improved experimental techniques and syntheses. Faraday Transactions (Physical Chemistry and Chemical Physics). Gas-phase kinetics and dynamics; molecular beam kinetics and spectroscopy photochemistry and photophysics; energy transfer and relaxation processes laser-induced chemistry; spectroscopies of molecules molecular and gas- phase complexes quantum chemistry and molecular structure statistical mechanics of gaseous molecules and complexes; spectroscopies statistical mechanics and quantum theory of the condensed phase computational chemistry and molecular dynamics; colloid and interface science surface science physisorption and chromatographic science chemisorption and heterogeneous catalysis zeolites and ion-exchange phenomena; electrode processes liquids and solutions; solid-state chemistry (microstructures and dynamics); reactions in condensed phases; physical chemistry of macromolecules and polymers; materials science; thermodynamics; biophysical chemistry and radiation chemistry.Perkin Transactions 1 (Organic Chemistry). All aspects of organic and bio-organic chemistry. These include synthetic organic chemistry of all types organometallic chemistry chemistry and biosynthesis of natural products the relationship between molecular structure and biological activity the chemistry of polymers and biological macromolecules and medicinal and agricultural chemistry where there is originality in the science.Perkin Transactions 2 (Physical Organic Chemistry). Physicochemical aspects of organic organometallic and bio- organic chemistry including kinetic mechanistic structural spectroscopic and theoretical studies. Such topics include structure-activity relationships and physical aspects of biological processes and of the study of polymers and biological macromolecules. Journal of Materials Chemistry. The chemistry of materials particularly those associated with advanced technology; modelling of materials; synthesis and structural characterisation; physicochemical aspects of fabrication; chemical structural electrical magnetic and optical properties; applications.The Analyst (Analytical Science). Theory and practice of all aspects of analytical chemistry fundamental and applied including inorganic and organic chemical physical and biological methods in applications areas such as environmental clinical geological industrial veterinary food etc. Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry. The development of fundamental theory practice and analytical application of atomic spectrometric techniques including ICP MS and XRF. Journal of Chemical Research. All areas of chemistry. The format of this journal (one- or two-page printed synopsis in Part S plus microform version of authors’ full text typescript in Part M) makes it particularly suitable for papers containing lengthy experimental sections or extensive data tabulations. 1.3 Procedure Each manuscript is considered independently by two referees. The referees’ reports constitute recommendations to the appropriate Editorial Board which is empowered to take final action on manuscripts submitted. The Editor acting for the Editorial Board is responsible for all administrative and executive actions and is empowered to accept or reject papers.It is the Editor’s duty to see that as far as possible agreement is reached between authors and referees; although the referees may need to be consulted again concerning an author’s reply to comments further refereeing will be avoided as far as possible. 1.3.1 Adjudication of disagreements.If there is a notable discrepancy between the reports of the two referees or if the difference between authors and referees cannot be resolved readily a third referee may be appointed as adjudicator. In extreme cases differences may be reported to the appropriate Editorial Board for resolution. When a paper is recommended for rejection by referees the Editor will inform the authors and return the top copy of the manuscript. Authors have the right to appeal to the Editorial Hoard if they regard a decision to reject as unfair. The Editor may refer to the Editorial Boards any papers which have been recommended for acceptance by the referees but about which the Editor is doubtful. 1.3.2 Anonymity. The anonymity of referees is strictly preserved and reports should be couched in terms which do not disclose the identity of the writer.A referee should never communicate directly with an author unless and until such action has been sanctioned by the Society through the Editor. 1.3.3 Conjidentiality. A referee should treat a paper received for assessment as confidential material. Information acquired by a referee from such a paper is not available for citation until the paper is published. 78REFEREEING PROCEDURE AND POLICY (1 995) The Editorial Boards are anxious to maintain and to reduce further if possible the publication times now being achieved. In this connection referees should submit their reports with the minimum of delay or return manuscripts immediately to the Editor if long delay seems inevitable. 1.4 Policy The primary criterion for acceptance of a contribution for publication is that it should advance scientific knowledge significantly. Papers that do not contain new experimental results may be considered for publication only if they either reinterpret or summarise known facts or results in a manner presenting an advance in chemical knowledge.Papers in interdisciplinary areas are acceptable if the chemical content is considered satisfactory. Papers reporting results regarded as routine or trivial are not acceptable in the absence of other desirable attributes. Although short papers are acceptable the Society strongly discourages the fragmentation of a substantial body of work into a number of short publications; such fragmentation is likely to be grounds for rejection.The length of an article should be commensurate with its scientific content; however authors are allowed every latitude (consistent with reasonable brevity) in the form in which their work is presented. Figures and flow-charts can often save space as well as clarify complicated arguments and should not be excised unless they are unhelpful or really extrava- gant. The use of colour and/or half-tones is permitted in cases where genuine clarification results; referees are asked to advise on this. If a paper as a whole is judged suitable for the Journal minor criticisms should not be unduly emphasised. It is the responsibility of the Editor to ensure the use of reasonably brief phraseology and to assist the author to present his work in the most appropriate format.However referees should not hesitate to recommend rejection of papers which appear incurably badly com- posed. It should be clearly understood that referees’ reports are made in confidence to the Editor at whose discretion comments will be transmitted to the author. To assist the Editor referees are requested to indicate which comments are designed only for consideration as distinct from those which in the referee’s view require specific action or an adequate answer before the paper is accepted. Referees may ask for sight of supporting data not submitted for publication or for sight of a previous paper which has been submitted but not yet published. Such requests must be made to the Editor not directly to the author 1.4.1 Authentication of new compounds. Reierees are asked to assess as a whole the evidence in support of the homogeneity and structure of all new compounds.No hard and fast rules can be laid down to cover all types of compounds but the Society’s policy is that evidence for the unequivocal identification of new compounds should wherever possible include good elemental analytical data; for example an accurate mass measurement of a molecular ion does not provide evidence of purity of a compound and must be accompanied by independent evidence of homogeneity. Low-resolution mass spectrometry must be treated with even more reserve in the absence of firm evidence to distinguish between alternative molecular formulae. Where elemental analytical data are not available appropriate evidence which is convincing to an expert in the field may be acceptable.Spectroscopic information necessary to the assignment of structure should normally be given. Just how complete this information should be must depend upon the circumstances; the structure of a compound obtained from an unusual reaction or isolated from a natural source needs much stronger supporting evidence than one derived by a standard reaction from a precursor of undisputed structure. Referees are reminded of the need to be exacting in their standards but at the same time flexible in their admission of evidence. It remains the Society’s policy to accept work only of high quality and to permit no lowering of standards. 1.5 Titles and Summaries Referees should comment on titles and summaries with the following points in mind. Titles of papers are used out of context by several organizations for current awareness purposes.To enable such systems to serve chemists adequately titles must be written around a sufficient number of scientific words carefully chosen to cover the important aspects of the paper. Summaries should preferably be self-contained so that they can be understood without reference to the main text. 1.7 Suggestions of Alternative Referees The Editor welcomes suggestions of alternative referees competent to deal with particular subject areas. Such suggestions are particularly helpful in cases where referees consider themselves ill-equipped (in terms of specialist knowledge) to deal with a specific paper and in highly specialized or new areas of research where only a limited number of experts may be available.If in such a case the alternative and the original referee work in the same institution the manuscript may be passed on directly after informing the Editor. 1.8 Short Papers and Letters ‘Short Papers’ are published in J. Chem. Research. They are intended for the description of essentially complete pieces of work which can be described in two printed pages or less. They are NOT preliminary communications nor in any way an alternative to Chemical Communications for which there are additional criteria of novelty and urgency. The quality of material contained in a short paper should be the same as that in a full paper. Investigations arising out of some larger project but not prosecuted to the same degree are particularly appropriate for this format.A short paper should not normally exceed in length about 8 pages of typescript including figures tables etc. It should comprise a one-sentence abstract and discussion but adequate experimental details are required. As a consequence of its length it appears in full in Part S with no microform version in Part M. ‘Letters’ published in Dalton Transactions Analytical Proceedings and The Analyst are a medium for the expression of scientific opinions and views normally concerning material published in that journal; it is intended that contributions in this format should be published rapidly. The letters section is for scientific discussion and is not intended to compete with media for the publication of more general matters such as Chemistry in Britain.Only rarely should a Letter exceed one printed column in length (about 1-2 pages of- typescript). Where a letter is polemical in nature and if it is accepted a reply will be solicited from other parties implicated for consideration for publication alongside the original letter. 1.9 Relationship with Communications Journals In cases where a preliminary report of the work described has appeared (for example in Chemical Communications) refereesREFEREEING PROCEDURE AND POLICY ( 1 995) should alert the editor to any excessive and unnecessary repetition of material; this can arise in connection with communications journals in which the restrictions on length and the reporting of experimental data are less severe than those of Chemical Communications.Furthermore the acceptability of the full paper must be judged on the basis of the significance of the additional information provided as well as on the criteria outlined in the foregoing sections. 2.0 Contributions to Chemical Communic- ations Chemical Communications is intended as a forum for preliminary accounts of original and significant work in any area of chemistry that is likely to prove of wide general appeal or exceptional specialist interest. Such preliminary reports should be followed up in most cases by full papers in other journals providing detailed accounts of the work. It is Society policy that only a fraction of research work warrants publication in Chemical Communications and strict refereeing standards should be applied. The benefit to the reader from the rapid publication of a particular piece of work before it appears as a full paper must be balanced against the desirability of avoiding duplicate publication.The needs of the reader not the author must be considered and priority in publication should not be allowed to determine acceptability. Acceptance should be recommended only if in the opinion of the referee the content of the paper is of such urgency or impact that rapid publication will be advantageous to the progress of chemical research. Communications should be brief and not exceed two pages in the printed form including Tables and illustrations - a maximum of 1500 words for a purely textual communication. Only in exceptional circumstances will a Communication be allowed to extend to four printed pages.Lengthy introductions and discussion extensive data and excessive experimental details and conjecture should not be included. Figures and Tables will only be published if they are essential to understanding the paper. Referees may ask for sight of supporting data before reaching a decision. The refereeing procedure for Communications is the same as that for full papers except that rapidity of reporting is crucial in order to maintain rapid publication. 3.0 Communications submitted to Analytical Proceedings and J. Anal. At. Spectrom. Criteria for acceptance of communications submitted to Analytical Proceedings and J. Anal. At. Spectrom. are broadly similar to those for contributions to Chemical Communications except that they should be concerned specifically with analytical chemistry.Scientific importance (rather than urgency) is the main criterion for acceptance. A decision whether or not to publish rests with the Editor who will obtain advice from at least one referee. 4.0 Communications submitted to Perkin Dalton or Faraday Transactions or J. Mater. Chem. Criteria for acceptance of Communications submitted to Perkin Dalton or Faraday Transactions or J. Mater. Chem. are similar to those for contributions to Chemical Communications except that the work will be of more specialist interest. For Perkin and Dalton Communications inclusion of key experi- mental data is expected. Assessment is carried out by a small nucleus of referees consisting largely of members of the appropriate Editorial Boards. 5.0 Contributions to Mendeleev Communic- ations Mendeleev Communications published jointly by the Royal Society of Chemistry and the Russian Academy of Sciences is a sister publication to Chemical Communications containing preliminary reports of the same type in any area of chemistry.The majority of contributions are from Russian authors. Assessment involves two stages of refereeing. Manuscripts submitted to the Moscow Editorial Office are refereed initially by a Russian scientist. If found acceptable they are then reviewed by Western scientists chosen by the Royal Society of Chemistry. Manuscripts submitted to the UK Editorial Office undergo this two-stage refereeing process in reverse. 6.0 X-Ray Crystallographic Work 6.1 All papers containing crystallographic determinations will be refereed by two referees one a structural chemist. If the editor considers it advisable the paper may also be sent to a specialist crystallographer for comment.Referees will not normally be expected to check values of structural parameters for publication (e.g. bond lengths and angles against atomic co- ordinates; this will be done after publication by the appropriate crystallographic data centre) but should still pay attention to the quality of the experimental crystallographic work. However their primary concern should be such new chemistry as is involved in the structure. 6.2 Papers will often contain the information in their titles that an X-ray structure determination has been carried out. However this is not obligatory especially if the X-ray determination forms only a minor part.Summaries should normally contain this information. 6.3 A structure referred to in a Communication will normally be fully refined. The Communication can then be considered to fulfil the archival function and the structure determination may not require further detailed refereeing when presented as part of a full paper. In the full paper the author’s purpose will then be served by a simple reference back to the original communication. However if the crystallography is discussed again at any length in the full paper the data should be re-presented to the referees in full and re-published if considered necessary. 6.4 There may be other cases when an author wishes to publish a full paper in which the result of a crystal structure determination is discussed but in which details or extensive discussion are considered unnecessary. The crystallographer may even be omitted as a co-author (for example when the determination is carried out by a commercial company). If the author is able to show the referees that this procedure is appropriate it will be allowed provided that it does not lead to unnecessary fragmentation. However the author must provide as supplementary information sufficient data relating to the crystal structure determination to allow a referee to make sure that the point made is correct and co-ordinates etc. will be deposited. The brief published description of the determination should be supplemented by appropriate reference to ‘unpub- lished work’.
ISSN:0267-9477
DOI:10.1039/JA9951000078
出版商:RSC
年代:1995
数据来源: RSC
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24. |
FACSS. Announcement and call for papers |
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Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry,
Volume 10,
Issue 1,
1995,
Page -
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摘要:
FACSS What is FACSS? FA4CSS is the Federation of Analytical Chemistry and Spectroscopy Societies organized to sponsor annual conferences in the field of analytical chemistry. FACSS is a nonprofit organization governed by a board with representatives frcm six member organizations - the American Chemical Society the Analytical Division (ACS); the Analysis Division of the Instrument Society of America (IS A); the Association of Analytical Chemists (MACHEM); the Society for Applied Spectroscopy (SAS); the Coblentz Society and the Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC). FACSS conferences rely on a successhl combination of invited and contributed papers workshops and short courses and technical exhibits. The record of achievement is due to FACSS's 20+ years of conference experience and to the contributions of scientists fiom the U.S.and abroad. Attendance at the annual meeting includes approximately 1,500 participants who can attend workshops and short courses given by experts in the various areas of analytical chemistry; visit the extensive e h b i t s of the most up-to-date analytical equipment and materials; select from approximately 1,000 papers and poster sessions that are presented throughout the week in parallel sessions; and enjoy sightseeing excursions. FACSS conferences are often called "just the right size," because they are large enough to cover the full range of analytical sciences and small enough to allow participants to talk with individual vendors visit with colleagues and just run into people they want to talk to. FACSS program sessions are recognized as being successful because they are presented by international leaders in the scientific community from academia industry and government covering the wide range of analytical sciences atomic spectroscopy bioanalysis clinical chemistry chemometrics gas and liquid chromatography electrochemistry environmental analysis infiared spectroscopy lasers mass spectrometry nuclear magnetic resonance spectrometry process analysis Raman spectroscopy x-ray spectroscopy and surface analysis.Who should attend? Any individual working in the field of analytical chemistry as a researcher analyst or techcian will benefit. In fact many people in the field regard FACSS as the one meeting a year that they can't afford to miss. Where is FACSS held? FACSS conferences are held in cities that also offer other attractions for participants.Meetings have been held in Philadelphia Cleveland Chicago and elsewhere. The I995 FACSS Conference wdl be held 15-20 Oct. in St. Louis. How do you get more information? receive the Call for Papers and Preliminary Program please write to the following address TO get on the FACSS mailing list and FACSS National Office 198 Thomas Johnson Drive Suite S-2 Frederick &ID 21702-4317 (301)846-4797 @-Marl JBrown@aol.com)Announcement and Cull for Papers Twenty-Second Annual Conference of the Federation of Analytical Chemistry and Spectroscopy Societies October 15-20 1995 Sabin Convention Center Cincinnati Ohio Richard F. Browner Georgia Institute of T e c h o l o u Joseph A. Caruso University of Cincinnati Program Chair General Chair 404-8 94-4020 513-556-5858 FACSS National Office 198 Thomas Johnson Dr.Suite S-2 Frederick LMD 21702-43 17 (301-846-4797) Scientific Program and Submission of Papers The FACSS meeting is one of the world's leading conferences in analytxal chemistry with over 1,500 participants and a program comprised of almost 1,000 presentations. This year in addition to sessions on the core topics of atomic and molecular spectrometry chromatography and electroanalysis the meeting will also feature sessions devoted to nanoscde analyses biosensors for the 2 1st century materials characterization chemical analysis and neuroscience challenges to environmental analysis and issues facing the next generation of analytical scientists.Contributed original research papers are solicited in all areas of analytical chemistry. Please complete the title submission form and return it by March 31 1995. Submitted papers will either be 20-minute talks or be presented in poster sessions. Upon acceptance of your submission final abstract materials and instructions will be sent to you in May. Listing of your presentation in the Final Program is contingent upon receipt of your 250-word final abstract via disk submission by June 30,1995. Awards Symposia Several awards symposia are arranged each year and include the hachem Award and Society for Applied Spectroscopy (SAS) Awards such as the Lester Strock and Lippincott Awards. This conference also sewes as the forum for the presentation of other SAS Awards and FACSS Student Awards.Tomas Hirschfeld Student Awards NominaQons are requested for the T o m Hirschfeld Student Awards which will be presented at the conference for the most outstaxiing papers submitted by graduate students. The student nominees will. give their papers at the conference. To be considered for these awards students must submit the titles of their papers resume two letters of nomination any reprints/ preprints and a 250-word abstract to the National Office by March 31 1995. As many as three students may be selected as awardees and their travel expenses will be arranged and paid for by FACSS. For further information concerning these student awards contact the FACSS National Office. Instrument Exhibit The instrument exhibit is one of the more useful and exciting components of the conference and is designed to complement the scientific program.The e'xhibition area can accommodate 125 booths and will serve as the primary gathering place for many of the social events associated with the conference. Workshops Short Courses and Employment Bureau Workshops and short courses conducted by leading scientists will be offered in conjunction with this conference. Typical topics include ICP-MS GC-MS LC-MS Sample Preparation Statistics Lasers in Analymal Chemistry and Chemometrics. An Employment Bureau will offer both l d and national job listings. In addition workshops on r e m e preparation and career planning will be available to assist professionals seelung employment. (ii)1995 FACSS Conference Title Submission Form Preliminary 100 word brief (PLEASE TYPE) > This form will not be accepted unless all areas are completed.If submitted incomplete it will be returned to you. Title Deadline March 31 1995 (Acceptance of submissions after this date cannot be guaranteed) Topic Code(s) +Title (maximum of 3 fiom Topic Code List below) Presen tingAut hor Other Authors Corresponding Author Information First Name Middle Initial Last Name CompanyAJniversity Address City State Zippostal Code country Phone Fax Phone No. E-Mail Address Preferred format* Talk 0 Poster Either * Actual format may be determined by space availability and format of similar talks in your topical area. +Specific references to vendor products in the title of papers will not be permitted. A. Atomic Spectrometry B.BioanalflcaVClinicall C. Chromatography/Separations D. Process Control/Analysis E. Electroanalpcal F. Mass Spectrometry Pharmaceutical Analyses G. Molecular Spectroscopy H. Raman I. Infrared/Near-Infrared J. Flow AnalysislLnjection K. ChemometricdComputers L. Luminescence M. Materials/Solid State/Surfaces N. NMR 0. Imaging P. Other Sessions P1 Fundamentals/Theory P2 Applications P3 Instrumentation P4 Other/Special Please send this completed form to FACSS National Office P.O. Box 278 (2409 Himes Street for overnight express) Manhattan KS 66502 E-Mail LANDOLL@Business.KSUVM.KSU. edu Note 1 Send completed forms for invited/solicited talks to the symposium organizer. Note 2 No FAX submissions will be accepted. (iii)Federation of Analytical Chemistry and Spectroscopy Sociei ties Nominations for the Tomas Hirschfeld Student Awards 1995 FACSS Conference October 15-20,1995 Sabin Convention Center Cincinnati Ohio Nominations are requested for the Tomas Hirschfeld Student Awards whch will be presented at the Twenty-Second FACSS Conference.Awards are given for the most outstanding papers submitted by graduate students in the field of analytical chemistry. The student nominees will present 20 minute papers at the 1995 FACSS Conference. To be considered for these awards students must submit a resume Call For Paper/Title Submission Form two letters of nominations including one from their graduate advisor any reprints/preprints and a 250 word abstract to Diane Landoll FACSS National Office P.O. Box 278 Manhattan KS 66502.@-Md LANDOLL@SUVM.KSU.edu) The deadline for submission of all materials is March 31 1995. Awardees wdl have their travel arranged and paid for by FACSS. Papers that are not selected for the award will still be scheduled for presentation. If you are unable to attend (unless you are an award winner) please notify us so we can remove your paper from the Program. For M e r information concerning the Tomas Hirschfeld Student Awards contact the Student Award Chairman Vicki McGwffin Mtchtgan State University Department of Chemistry E. Lansing 'MI 48823 (517) 355-9715
ISSN:0267-9477
DOI:10.1039/JA995100000i
出版商:RSC
年代:1995
数据来源: RSC
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