Article structure
The manuscript should be compiled in the following order: The manuscript should be compiled in the following order: Novelty Statement, List of five referees with their full contact information, Title, Authors & Affiliations, Abstract, Keywords, Introduction, Experimental, Results and Discussion, Conclusion, Acknowledgments, References and Notes, Legends, Tables, Figures, and Schemes.
Novelty Statement: A statement of novelty should be provided in not more than 100 words giving a brief description of the original research conducted in the submitted manuscript.
Title: The title should be brief, specific, and rich in informative words; it should not contain any literature references or compound numbers.
Authors and Affiliations: Where possible, supply given names, middle initials, and family names for complete identification. Use superscript lowercase letters to indicate different addresses, which should be as detailed as possible and must include the country name. The corresponding author should be indicated with an asterisk, and contact details (email, fax) should be placed in a footnote. Information relating to other authors (e.g., present addresses) should be placed in footnotes indicated by the appropriate symbols (overleaf).
Abstracts: Authors must include a short abstract of approx 100 - 300 words that states briefly the purpose of the research, the principal results, and major conclusions. References and compound numbers should not be mentioned in the abstract unless full details are given.
Keywords: Authors should provide with at least 4 keywords that define the major areas of the manuscript's focus of research. These keywords will be used for indexing purpose.
Introduction
The author(s) should endeavor to define the significance of the work and the justification for its publication. Any background discussion should be brief and restricted to relevant material.
Material and methods (Experimental or Methodology)
Authors should be as concise as possible in experimental viagra pas cher descriptions. The experimental section must contain all of the information necessary to assurance reproducibility. Previously published methods should be indicated by a reference and only relevant modifications should be described. All vendor details, including company, city, and country, should be mentioned for chemicals, reagents, strains, etc. For statistical analysis, please state the appropriate test(s) in addition to hypothesized p-value or significant level (for example 0.05).
Results
The study results should be clear and concise. Restrict the use of tables and figures to depict data that is essential to the message and interpretation of the study. Do not duplicate data in both figures and tables. The results should be presented in a logical sequence in the text, tables and illustrations.
Discussion
This should explore the significance of the results of the work, not repeat them. Include in the discussion the implications of the findings and their limitations, how the findings fit into the context of other relevant work, and directions for future research.
Conclusion(s)
The main conclusion(s) of the study should be presented in a short conclusion statement that can stand alone and be linked with the goals of the study. State new hypotheses when warranted.
Include recommendations when appropriate. Unqualified statements and conclusions not completely supported by the obtained data should be avoided.
Acknowledgements: An acknowledgement section may be included. It should be placed after the manuscript text and before the references.
Abbreviations: Standard ACS abbreviations should be used throughout the manuscript and are employed without periods. The preferred forms for some of the more commonly used abbreviations are mp, bp, μC, K, min, h, mL, μL, g, mg, μg, cm, mm, nm, mol, mmol, μmol, M, mM, μM, ppm, HPLC, TLC, GC, 13C NMR, 1H NMR, GCMS, HRMS, FABHRMS, UV, FTIR, EPR, ESR, DNase, IV, XRD, EDX, XPS, ED50, ID50, IC50, LD50, im, ip, iv, mRNA, RNase, rRNA, tRNA, cpm, Ci, dpm, Vmax, Km, k, t1/2. All nonstandard abbreviations should be defined following the first use of the abbreviation.
References Citation in text: All citations in the text should refer to:
1. Single author: the author's name (without initials, unless there is ambiguity) and the year of publication (Smith, 2003)
2. Two authors: both authors' names and the year of publication (Smith & Jones, 2004)
3. Three, four or five authors: all authors names and year of publication (Smith, Jones, & Brown, 2005). For all subsequent citations of this work use et al. (Smith et al., 2005).
4. Six or more authors: first author's name followed by et al. and the year of publication (Black et al., 2007). Citations may be made directly or parenthetically. Groups of references should be listed first alphabetically, then chronologically, e.g., (Allan, 1996a, b, 1999; Allan & Jones, 1995; Allen et al., 1994). Kramer et al. (2000) have recently shown..."
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