ACS Nano

ACS Nano is a monthly, peer-reviewed, scientific journal, first published in August 2007 by the American Chemical Society. The current editor in chief is Paul S. Weiss (University of California, Los Angeles). The journal publishes original research articles, reviews, perspectives, interviews with distinguished researchers, views on the future of nanoscience and nanotechnology.[1][2][3]

ACS Nano
DisciplineNanoscience, Nanotechnology
LanguageEnglish
Edited byPaul S. Weiss
Publication details
History2007–present
Publisher
American Chemical Society (United States)
FrequencyMonthly
14.588 (2019)
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4ACS Nano
Indexing
CODENANCAC3
ISSN1936-0851 (print)
1936-086X (web)
Links

Scope

The focus of ACS Nano is synthesis, assembly, characterization, theory, and simulation of nanostructures, nanotechnology, nanofabrication, self assembly, nanoscience methodology, and nanotechnology methodology. The focus also includes nanoscience and nanotechnology research – the scope of which is chemistry, biology, materials science, physics, and engineering.[1][2]

Abstracting and indexing

ACS Nano is indexed in the following databases:[2][3][4][5][6]

gollark: I'm pretty sure I remember there being some vulnerabilities in older Qualcomm wireless chips/drivers, patches for which will just never reach most of the affected stuff.
gollark: It would be especially great if, like phones now, your car just didn't get security patches after 5 months, and gained an ever-growing pile of remotely exploitable vulnerabilities.
gollark: They should probably just not have network access, except for a wired connection to upload maps and such. Unfortunately, someone will definitely do something stupid like... have a 4G connection in it for interweb browsing, make the entire thing run some accursed Android derivative and put the self-driving code on there too, and expose that to the user, and make it wildly insecure.
gollark: I'm sure someone will manage to entirely mess up the security, yes.
gollark: (Just kidding! There's no way car OSes will be (are, probably) non-locked-down enough to do that!)

References

  1. "Home page". ACS Nano. American Chemical Society. August 2010. Retrieved 2010-08-13.
  2. "About the journal". ACS Nano. American Chemical Society. August 2010. Retrieved 2010-08-13.
  3. "CAS Source Index (CASSI)". American Chemical Society. August 2010. Retrieved 2008-10-20.
  4. "Chemical Citation Index". Thomson Reuters. August 2010. Retrieved 2010-08-13.
  5. "Master Journal List". Thomson Reuters. August 2010. Retrieved 2010-08-13.
  6. "Materials Science Citation Index". Thomson Reuters. August 2010. Retrieved 2010-08-13.
  7. "Revisions to the Nature Index".
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.