Ifind the notes very easy to read and to understand. All the necessary coverage on each topic made the note a must to have! I only wish there will be more of others such inorganic, analytical, physical, or biochemistry, even the laboratory guideline will make studying a lot easier.
Not only are Chemistry Notes organized and easy-to-digest, but also the author gives many examples and tricks. Personally, I liked two things in these notes: A) The gradual depth of concepts, which saved me the overwhelming feeling one feels when (disorganized) information of so-called "mandatory textbooks" comes exploding from everywhere; B) The abundance of problems and their detailed solutions!
Also, it looks weird, but the professor - on his website - promises to answer FREELY and INSTANTANEOUSLY any email asking a chemistry question through his website. Tell me where you can find such level of service at any University's tutoring center!
I enjoyed using the chemistry notes. It helped me understand what I was teaching to my students. The students liked having all the examples I gave them and I liked how everything was broken down to where the students could understand the information.
The Journal of Organic Chemistry (JOC) welcomes original contributions of fundamental research in all branches of the theory and practice of organic chemistry. In selecting manuscripts for publication, the editors place emphasis on the quality and novelty of the work, as well as the breadth of interest to the organic chemistry community.
Manuscripts with a focus on the following topics along with guidance are included below. The scope of organic chemistry is broader than these several areas of research and the Editorial Board is consistently welcoming and evaluating manuscripts addressing topics in addition to these. Guidelines for specific focus areas are as follows:
(a) Single or multistep synthetic methods manuscripts and total synthesis manuscripts are expected to demonstrate strategies, transformations, or shortened routes to target structures that show conceptual novelty, not merely the extension of previously reported chemistry to a different class of reaction substrates, reagents, or catalysts.
(b) Manuscripts focusing on mechanistic studies (experimental or theoretical) should show methodological advances or provide novel insight into the course of chemical reactions, rather than only confirming previously established mechanisms.
(d) Manuscripts with elements of biological study, analytical chemistry, functional molecules and systems, or materials science should demonstrate novelty in those aspects associated with the organic chemistry portion of the work being reported.
If you are a new JOC author, or if you have not submitted a manuscript during the past year, please read and familiarize yourself with these complete Author Guidelines to ensure you are up to date with all of the journal's manuscript preparation and submission requirements.
Authors must emphasize any unexpected, new, and/or significant hazards or risks associated with the reported work. This information should be in the Experimental Section of a full article and included in the main text of a letter. Statement examples can be found in the Safety Statement Style Sheet and additional information on communicating safety information from the ACS Guide to Scholarly Communication is freely available here.
The Journal of Organic Chemistry is participating in a pilot program to further encourage use of Safety Statements in manuscripts, including details on how to mitigate hazards and risks. Reviewers and Editors will be more carefully checking manuscripts to determine whether an existing Safety Statement is accurate and complete, and if there is no Safety Statement in a manuscript whether there are any hazards or risks that require a Safety Statement be added. If a Safety Statement is needed, authors will be asked to include one in their manuscript at revision and before acceptance.
Notes are concise accounts describing novel observations, new methods of wide applicability or interest, or focused studies of general interest. Notes differ from Articles in having a narrower scope. The level of experimental rigor, including compound characterization, required for a Note is the same as that for an Article. The length of a Note is limited to 3,000 words, which includes the abstract, introductory paragraph, results and discussion, and space occupied by tables and graphics; the word count limit does not include the experimental section, acknowledgments, supporting information availability statement, and list of references. Tables and graphics count toward the word-count limits at the rate of 50 words per vertical inch for one-column items (8.4 cm/3.3 inches wide or less), and 100 words per vertical inch for wider items up to two-columns (17.8 cm/7.0 inches). Authors are reminded that any graphics that are reduced in size to help adhere to the above length limits need to be fully legible when the page is printed at 100% scale.
JOCSynopses are brief focused reviews of current topics of interest to organic chemists written by active researchers that include work from their own laboratories. Manuscripts that describe newly emerging areas of research are encouraged. JOCSynopses are invited by the Editor-in-Chief but voluntary submissions will be considered and screened before a formal review. They are limited to 4,000 words of text, not counting acknowledgments and the list of references, and are limited to no more than 80 references and endnotes. All graphics and tables combined must be able to fit on two standard word- processor pages. Authors are reminded that any graphics that are reduced in size to help adhere to the above length limits need to be fully legible when the page is printed at 100% scale.
Perspectives are personal overviews of specialized research areas by acknowledged experts. They are published only by invitation of the Editor-in-Chief. Details on length and other requirements will be provided to authors.
While this document will provide basic information on how to prepare and submit the manuscript as well as other critical information about publishing, we also encourage authors to visit the ACS Researcher Resources for additional information on everything that is needed to prepare (and review) manuscripts for ACS journals and partner journals, such as
All ACS journals and partner journals have simplified their formatting requirements in favor of a streamlined and standardized format for an initial manuscript submission. Read more about the requirements and the benefits these serves authors and reviewers here.
See the list of Acceptable Software and appropriate File Designations to be sure your file types are compatible with ACS Paragon Plus. Information for manuscripts generated from TeX/LaTeX is also available.
The cover letter should include a brief paragraph pointing out the significance of the reported work. Information regarding previous submission to The Journal of Organic Chemistry or to any other ACS journal should be included.
Title. The title should be descriptive of the topic of the article and as short as possible, using easily searchable keywords and minimizing hyphenation. Avoid using abbreviations and acronyms unless they are more commonly used than spelled out words. Also avoid complex compound names as much as possible in the title by using generic names, and spell out elements rather than using symbols unless part of a compound name. Neither the title nor any other text should indicate that the article is part of a numbered series on a broader research topic, or a numbered contribution from a particular institution or research group.
Introduction. The introduction should include sufficient background information to provide appropriate context as to the novelty and importance of the new work and clearly state the purpose and objectives of the research. An extensive review of prior work is not appropriate, and documentation of the relevant background literature should be selective rather than exhaustive, particularly if reviews can be cited. The opening paragraph of a Note or JOCSynopsis serves a similar function but is briefer and is not labeled as an Introduction section.
Results and Discussion. The presentation of experimental details in the results and discussion section should be kept to a minimum. Reiteration of information that is made obvious in tables, figures, or reaction schemes should be avoided. A Results and Discussion section heading is used in an Article but not in a Note or JOCSynopsis.
Experimental Section/Computational Methods. For Notes and Articles, manuscripts reporting the results of experimental work must include all experimental procedures, compound characterization data, and any associated literature citations. Authors have the flexibility to place the experimental content in the main text (Experimental Section), in the Supporting Information, or a combination of both as it best supports the manuscript, so long as the information is accurate and complete. As needed, authors may substitute or also include a section on Computational Methods. These sections should describe methods in sufficient detail to permit repetition of the work by others. The Data Requirements section should be consulted for guidance on reporting synthetic experimental, compound characterization, spectroscopic, crystallographic, computational, and bioassay data in the Experimental Section, Computational Methods, and Supporting Information. A general Experimental Methods paragraph may be optionally provided to document procedures, such as purification methods, solvent removal, and spectroscopic and chromatographic analyses, that are common to most of the individual procedures, and should be placed at the beginning of the Experimental Section.
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