Journal of Molecular Liquids

Basic Information

Brief Name: J MOL LIQ
Impact Factor: 5.3
ISSN: 0167-7322
Research Field: CHEMICAL
h-index: 82
Self-citation Rate: 11.3%
Articles per Year: 2454

SCI Index Status: Science Citation Index Expanded
Journal Introduction:

Structure, Interactions and Dynamics of Simple, Molecular, Ionic and Complex Liquids The Journal of Molecular Liquids includes papers in the following areas: – Simple organic liquids and mixtures – Ionic liquids and deep eutectic solvents – Surfactant solutions (including micelles and vesicles) and Colloids – Thermotropic and lyotropic liquid crystals and gels – Ferrofluids – Water, aqueous solutions and other hydrogen-bonded liquids – Lubricants, polymer solutions and melts – Molten metals and salts – Phase transitions and critical phenomena in liquids and confined fluids – Self assembly in complex liquids – Biomolecules in solution – Surface science involving solid-liquid and liquid-liquid interfaces. The emphasis is on the molecular (or microscopic) understanding of particular liquids or liquid systems, especially concerning structure, dynamics and intermolecular forces, and on the solvent roles in structural and dynamical properties, thermodynamic quantities, functions, and reactions at the molecular level. Experimental studies, computer simulations, quantum chemical simulations and analytical theory will be considered for publication. The experimental techniques used may include: – Conventional spectroscopy (mid-IR and far-IR, Raman, NMR, etc.) – Non-linear optics and time resolved spectroscopy (psec, fsec, asec, ISRS, etc.) – Light scattering (Rayleigh, Brillouin, PCS, etc.) – Dielectric relaxation – X-ray and neutron scattering and diffraction. Papers just reporting experimental results that do not contribute to the understanding of the fundamentals of molecular liquids and ionic liquids and solutions will not be accepted. Only papers of a non-routine nature and advancing the field will be considered for publication. Authors who wish to appeal the rejection of their manuscript may submit a formal appeal. Appeal requests must be made in writing to the Journal (you can find the Journal's email address on the Journal's homepage) with the word "appeal" and the manuscript number in the subject line. Authors should: submit their appeal within 1 month of receiving the rejection letter and should not submit their manuscript to any other journal while their appeal is being considered. detail in the appeal letter why they refute the decision and provide point-by-point responses to any of the editors' and/or reviewers' comments that seem to have contributed to the decision. A difference of opinion as to the interest, novelty, or suitability of the manuscript for the journal is not a sufficient reason for an appeal. provide any new information or data that the Journal should take into consideration. This should not be a repetition of what was included in the original submission or cover letter. provide evidence if they believe the Editor or Reviewer has made technical errors in their assessment of the manuscript. include evidence if they believe the Editor or Reviewer may have a conflict of interest or has been biased. The appeal will be considered by the Journal's Editors-in-Chief or their designated representative (such as members of a journal's Ethics Committee), or by Elsevier staff as needed. Even if the Journal agrees to reconsider the manuscript, acceptance is not guaranteed, and the reconsideration process may involve re-review by previous or new reviewers or Editors, and substantive revision. Only one appeal per submission will be considered and the Editor's decision will be final. The Journal is unable to consider appeals in which the subject matter is the focus of an on-going legal proceeding and reserves the right to decline, suspend or discontinue an appeal in the event that legal proceedings pertaining to the subject matter of the appeal should commence.

CiteScore

CiteScore
10.3
SJR
0.918
SNIP
1.136
Subject Rank Percentile
Physics and AstronomyCondensed Matter Physics
37 / 434 91%

Journal Statistics

Monthly
Issues/Year
Time to first decision: 23days Review time: 79days Submission to acceptance: 92days Acceptance to publication: 5days
Review Cycle
$3380
Article Processing Fee

Submission Information

Accepted Types:

Experimental studies, computer simulations (MD or MC) and analytical theory

Related Articles

Direct arylation polycondensation towards water/alcohol-soluble conjugated polymers as the electron transporting layers for organic solar cells

Qingwu Yin, Zhenfeng Wang, Boming Xie, Fei Huang, Yong Cao

2021-04-30 Communication

DOI: 10.1039/D1CC01128F

Development of wound healing scaffolds with precisely-triggered sequential release of therapeutic nanoparticles

Tauseef Ahmad, Sean McGrath, Catherine Sirafim, Ronaldo J. F. C. do Amaral, Shin-Loong Soong, Renuka Sitram, Shifa'a Turkistani, Francesco Santarella

2020-10-27 Paper

DOI: 10.1039/D0BM01277G

An elemental S/P photocatalyst for hydrogen evolution from water under visible to near-infrared light irradiation

Qiuyan Cao, Minna Guo, Jing Cao, Haili Lin, Yong Chen, Shifu Chen

2019-10-09 Communication

DOI: 10.1039/C9CC05952K

Effective utilisation of waste cooking oil in a single-cylinder diesel engine using alumina nanoparticles

Sumit Roy, Pranay Kumar Parsi, R. Sreeram Kotha, Sanmitra Barman, Kalluri Vinayak, Mili Mitra Roy, Rahul Banerjee

2019-11-11 Paper

DOI: 10.1039/C9SE00393B

Strong circularly polarized luminescence of an octahedral chromium(iii) complex

Carolin Dee, Francesco Zinna, Winald R. Kitzmann, Gennaro Pescitelli, Katja Heinze, Lorenzo Di Bari, Michael Seitz

2019-10-14 Communication

DOI: 10.1039/C9CC06909G

Cu2ZnSnS4 nanocrystals for microwave thermal and microwave dynamic combination tumor therapy

Taya Tang, Xiaomu Xu, Zhiwen Wang, Jijing Tian, Yue Yang, Caizhang Ou, Huihui Bao, Tianlong Liu

2019-10-10 Communication

DOI: 10.1039/C9CC07762F

The dilemma between acid and base catalysis in the synthesis of benzimidazole from o-phenylenediamine and carbon dioxide‡

Martin Hulla, Simon Nussbaum, Alexy R. Bonnin, Paul J. Dyson

2019-10-08 Communication

DOI: 10.1039/C9CC06156H

A hollow neuronal carbon skeleton with ultrahigh pyridinic N content as a self-supporting potassium-ion battery anode

Yongwen Sun, Ya Zhang, Zheng Xing, Denghu Wei, Quanchao Zhuang

2019-12-06 Paper

DOI: 10.1039/C9SE00889F

Electrocatalytic cleavage of lignin model dimers using ruthenium supported on activated carbon cloth

Mahlet Garedew, Daniel Young-Farhat, Souful Bhatia, Pengchao Hao, James E. Jackson

2019-12-19 Paper

DOI: 10.1039/C9SE00912D

Disclaimer
This page provides academic journal information for reference and research purposes only. We are not affiliated with any journal publishers and do not handle publication submissions. For publication-related inquiries, please contact the respective journal publishers directly.
If you notice any inaccuracies in the information displayed, please contact us at [email protected]. We will promptly review and address your concerns.