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Int. J. Mech. Eng. Autom.
Volume 1, Number 1, 2014, pp. 1-10
Received: ** **, 2014, Published: ** **, 2014
International Journal of
Mechanical Engineering
and Automation
Paper Title (The title should be on page 1 and not exceed
15 words)
Full Name1, Full Name2... and Full Name1, 2
1. Dept. name of Organization, Name of Organization, City, Country
2. Dept. name of Organization, Name of Organization, City, Country
Corresponding author: Authors Name (E-mail)
Abstract: The Abstract must serve as a stand-alone document, must be a single paragraph not to exceed 250 words. The Abstract
should include the rationale, methods, key results and the main conclusion, including key points of discussion. It should not contain
citations of other papers.
Key words: Component, style, units and symbols, equations. (Three to eight key words must be given below the Abstract)
Nomenclature:
Cx
d
h
K
k
M
Nu
P
Pr
Q
Blade axial chord (m)
Leading edge diameter (m)
Heat transfer coefficient (W/m2-K)
Thermal conductivity (W/m-K)
Turbulent kinetic energy
Mach number (dimensionless)
Nusselt number (dimensionless)
Pressure (Pa)
Prandtl number (dimensionless)
Heat flux (W/m2)
Reex
Reynolds number, Reex =
r
S
T
Tu
U
Y+
Z
…
ρUex Cx
1
3
μ
(dimensionless)
Recovery factor, r = Pr
Blade surface length (m)
Temperature (K)
Turbulent Intensity (%)
Free-stream velocity (m/s)
Dimensionless wall distance
Spanwise coordinate, normalized by blade span
…
1. Introduction (Heading 1)
Manuscripts submitted to our journal are considered
on the understanding that they have not been published,
and are not under consideration for publication,
elsewhere; and that all persons entitled to authorship
have been named and have approved the final version
of the submitted manuscript.
2. Style Notes for All Submissions
All manuscripts must be in English, and it may be
3000-8000 words or longer if approved by the editor,
including an abstract, keywords, texts, figures, tables,
footnotes, appendixes, and references. Manuscripts
should be submitted in docx format (Word 2007) or
doc format (older Word versions). Use Times New
Roman font, pt-size 12, and pages should be
numbered.
2.1 Abbreviations (Heading 2)
All non-standard abbreviations must first appear in
parentheses following their meaning and written in
full at first mention in the Abstract, main text and each
table and figure legend. Subsequently, only
abbreviations should be used.
Standard abbreviations do not need to be defined.
There follows a short list of preferred standard
abbreviations for cases where confusion is possible.
2.2 Tables and Figures
2
Paper Title (The title should be on page 1 and not exceed 15 words)
Place tables and figures at the top and bottom of
columns. Avoid placing them in the middle of
columns. Large tables and figures may span across
both columns. Table captions should appear above the
tables; figure captions should be below the figures;
Insert tables and figures after they are cited in the text,
and use the abbreviation “Fig. 1” in the text.
2.2.1 Tables (Heading 3)
For example:
In this design, parameters for semiconductor power
devices and the resonant capacitor were fixed because
the output power was constant at 1,200 W and the
current through them was also constant. The current
density JW of the primary and the secondary
solenoidal copper windings for the transformer was
fixed at 3 A/mm2 here.
Table 1 shows variable parameters for this design.
The operating magnetic flux density ΔB, the core
dimensions of the transformer and the switching
frequency fSW were varied. Parameters related to the
transformer were mainly varied because the power
loss generated from the transformer was influential in
the experiment. Heat dissipation efficiency kHS was
0.45 W/cm3 taking the cooling ….
2.2.2 Figures
 Submit figures at approximately twice the size
that they will appear. Ensure that, after reduction, they
will be compatible with the double-column format of
the journal (column width of 80 mm; maximum printed
size of 226 × 170 mm).
 Submit figures in electronic form. TIFF, JPEG,
PSD are acceptable formats for the figures.
For example:
Fig.1 shows the calculation result of the power
Table 1
Parameters for design consideration.
Parameter
Switching frequency
Magnetic flux density
Transformer core shape
Core width
Core depth
Core height
Heat dissipation efficiency
varied from 50 mT to 150 mT, the core width varied
from 20.0 mm to 50.0 mm and the switching frequency
was varied from 100 kHz to 1,000 kHz (totally 3,000
samples = 10 frequencies × 10 magnetic ….
Step
100 kHz
10 mT
1.0 mm
Fig. 1
Estimated efficiency and power density of
contactless DC connector.
2.3 Equations
Use the equation editor or MathType for equations
and number them in order. Equations should be typed
using either the Times New Roman or the Symbol
font (please no other font).
Please note that equation numbers, within
parentheses, are to position flush right, as in Eq. (1),
using a right tab stop; the equation is centered using a
center tab stop. Be sure that the symbols in your
equation have been defined before or immediately
following the equation. Use “Eq. (1)” not “Equation 1”
or “(1)”, especially at the beginning of a sentence: “Eq.
(1) is . . .”
V
s2 N1
2
1 +s D2 +sD3 +D4
M= |V2 | = |s3 D
density and the conversion efficiency for the 1.2 kW,
384 V-192 V contactless DC connector under the
condition that the operating magnetic flux density ΔB
Min.
Max.
100 kHz 1 MHz
50 mT
150 mT
PQ20
PQ50
20.0 mm 50.0 mm
14.0 mm 32.0 mm
20.0 mm 50.0 mm
0.45 W/cm3
1
|
(1)
2.4 Footnotes
Use footnotes sparingly (or not at all) and place
them at the bottom of the column on the page on
which they are referenced. Use Times 10-point type,
single-spaced.
Paper Title (The title should be on page 1 and not exceed 15 words)
To help your readers, avoid using footnotes
altogether and include necessary peripheral
observations in the text (within parentheses, if you
prefer, as in this sentence). Number footnotes
separately from reference numbers, and in superscripts.
Do not put footnotes in the reference list.
2.5 Units and Symbols
 The journal uses SI units wherever possible, but
accepts that other units may have to be used on
occasion. Products of two units must be written with a
space between the units (e.g. 10 g m-2). Units derived
by division must be written using the appropriate index
(e.g., m s-1 (not m/s)). Units are follows by a space (e.g.
10 g mg-1 protein). Use the appropriate prefix for units
and avoid using multipliers on axes of graphs or in
table headings.
 Volume units based either on the litre (e.g., L, mL,
µL) or on the cubic metre (e.g., m3, mm, cm3, dm3) will
be accepted, provided that manuscripts are internally
consistent in their use. For concentration the same
applies, as well as units such as µm, mm and m.
 Do not mix complete spellings and abbreviations
of units: “Wb/m2” or “webers per square meter”, not
“webers/m2”. Spell out units when they appear in text:
“… a few henries”, not “…a few H”.
 Use a zero before decimal points: “0.25”, not
“.25”. Use “cm3”, not “cc”.
3. Conclusions
It should conclude the main achievements of this
paper and make some recommendations. Please do not
repeat any detailed methods or results in
“Conclusions”, only need to summarize your results,
and say why your study is important and what it adds
to the literature/science.
Put applicable sponsor acknowledgments here; do
not place them on the first page of your paper or as a
footnote.
References
For numbered references, the reference list is
ordered in the order of their appearance in the paper.
Citations in the text should take the following format:
Nutritional quality of alimentary animal products is
a very important parameter, especially, regarding the
link between food and human health, a vital area of
research today. International medical scientific world
believes that dietary fats, and especially those of
animal origin, are responsible for certain diseases,
especially those of cardiovascular nature and those
associated with obesity [1]. However, the research
initiated by HU [2] have shown that PUFA include a
special category of fats called Omega-3 fatty acids and
CLA (or fatty acid Omega 7), which are essential for
developing and maintaining a healthy human body.
They have to be provided by food as they are not
synthesized in the human body, especially CLA, which
is present only in milk and meat from ruminants, this
result in the hydrogenation processes of linoleic acid by
rumen microorganism [3]…
In References List:
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]
[5]
Acknowledgment
The
preferred
spelling
of
the
word
“acknowledgment” in America is without an “e” after
the “g”.
3
[6]
F. Abu-Gazaleh, E.L. Lima, T. Menezes, R. Fisberg, Fatty
acids and cardiovascular diseases: A review, Rev. Nutr.
Compinas 15 (2007) 73-80.
F.B. Hu, J.E. Manson, W.C. Willett, Types of dietary fat
and risk of coronary heart disease: A critical review,
Journal of the American College of Nutrition 20 (2001)
5-19.
S. Millward, M.A. McGuire, M.K. McGuire, Conjugated
linoleic acid (CLA) and polyunsaturated fatty acids
Omega 3: A ruminant fatty acids with beneficial effects on
human health, Journal of Food Comp. 5 (2004) 185-197.
Saudi
ministry
of
economy
and
planning,
http://www.mep.gov.sa/ (accessed August 1, 2014).
J. Clay, World Agriculture and the Environment: A
Commodity by-Commodity Guide to Impacts and
Practices, Island Press, Washington, United States, 2004,
p. 14.
C.A. Young, T.S. Jordan, Cyanide remediation: Current
and past technologies, in: Proceedings of the 10th Annual
Conference on Hazardous Waste Res., 1995, pp. 104-129.
Paper Title (The title should be on page 1 and not exceed 15 words)
4
In addition, if the article is not published in English,
please translate it into English and point out the
original language at the end of this reference, e.g., [1]
A.H. Ling, G.W. Robertson, Reflection coefficient of
some tropical vegetation covers, Chinese Agricultural
Science Bulletin 27 (2009) 141-144. (in Chinese)
Appendix
The appendix must be mentioned in the text (e.g., “as described in the Appendix…”), just like other figures and tables are. The
appendix should be inserted after the References section in the main paper, and multiple appendices are referred to as Appendix A,
Appendix B, etc.
The appendix may take the form of figures, tables, formulas, datasets, etc. Figures are denoted as Fig. A1, Fig. A2 …, Tables as
Table A1, Table A2…. and Equations as Eq. A1, Eq. A2…, etc.
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