Materials Horizons

Materials Horizons is a bimonthly peer-reviewed scientific journal that covers research across the breadth of materials science at the interface between chemistry, physics, biology and engineering. The current executive editor is Sam Keltie. The journal was established in 2014.[1][2] A sister journal Nanoscale Horizons was launched in 2016.[3]

Materials Horizons
DisciplineMaterials Science
LanguageEnglish
Edited bySeth Marder
Publication details
History2014–present
Publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry (United Kingdom)
FrequencyBimonthly
12.319 (2019)
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Mater. Horiz.
Indexing
CODENMHAOBM
ISSN2051-6347 (print)
2051-6355 (web)
OCLC no.869908360
Links

Article types

The journal publishes "communications" (articles for rapid publication), "reviews" (state-of-the-art accounts of a research field), "mini-reviews" (research highlights in an emerging area of materials science, usually from the past 2–3 years) and "focus articles" (educational articles providing an overview of a concept in materials science).[4]

Abstracting and indexing

The journal is indexed in the Science Citation Index.[5] Selective content is also indexed in Polymer Library, Inspec, Biotechnology and Bioengineering Abstracts, METADEX, Mechanical Engineering Abstracts, Solid State and Superconductivity Abstracts, Metal Abstracts and CSA Technology Research Database, and CABI.[6]

gollark: This has been explained already.
gollark: I also do this, but:- how often do the search queries contain things you dislike- how hard is it to scroll past it or whatever, given that average queries probably won't bring up much of that
gollark: I do not think search is a significant issue, and the logreading thing can be fixed.
gollark: I mean, you could shunt it to an archive channel via webhook things after however long, but that would have its own issues.
gollark: The precise time is tunable, after some amount of time it would probably cease to be discussed. And why should they *not* exist? The logreading issue is fixable as I said, search... maybe less so, but I'm not sure how many search queries actually turn up that stuff *now* and how big an issue it would be.

See also

References

  1. Marder, Seth; Dunn, Liz. "Materials Horizons: a personal perspective". Mater. Horizons. 1: 10. doi:10.1039/c3mh90001k.
  2. "UKSG eNews". Jisc-collections.ac.uk. 1 February 2013. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
  3. "Nanoscale Horizons". Rsc.org. 19 May 2015. Retrieved 14 February 2019.
  4. "Materials Horizons Article Guidelines". Rsc.org.
  5. "Science Citation Index Master List". Ip-science,thomsonreuters.com.
  6. "New Journals in Zetoc". Zetoc.mimas.ac.uk. 20 December 2013.
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