Generated by GPT-5-mini| Angewandte Chemie International Edition | |
|---|---|
| Title | Angewandte Chemie International Edition |
| Discipline | Chemistry |
| Editor | Dean Tantillo |
| Publisher | Wiley-VCH |
| Country | Germany |
| Frequency | Weekly |
| History | 1887–present |
| Impact | 16.8 |
| Impact-year | 2023 |
Angewandte Chemie International Edition is a peer-reviewed scientific journal publishing original research across chemical sciences, including organic chemistry, inorganic chemistry, physical chemistry, materials science, and chemical biology. Founded as a German-language periodical in the late 19th century, the journal evolved into its modern international English edition and is published by Wiley-VCH. It serves as a venue for high-impact experimental and theoretical studies by researchers affiliated with institutions such as the Max Planck Society, Harvard University, Stanford University, the University of Cambridge, and Kyoto University.
The journal traces roots to the 19th-century publishing milieu involving figures connected to the chemical community in Germany, Prussia, and cities like Berlin and Leipzig, paralleling contemporaneous publications such as Berichte der deutschen chemischen Gesellschaft and Journal für praktische Chemie. Early editorial stewardship intersected with personalities and institutions analogous to the German Chemical Society and later with international developments around conferences like the Solvay Conference. Throughout the 20th century the title navigated the upheavals of World War I, World War II, and postwar reconstruction, adapting editorial frameworks employed by periodicals associated with publishers such as Elsevier and Springer Science+Business Media. The transition to an English-language international edition reflected broader trends exemplified by journals like Nature and Science and formalized ties to international research communities including contributors from United States, United Kingdom, France, Japan, and China.
The journal solicits submissions spanning subfields connected to landmark research from groups led by investigators at institutions such as Massachusetts Institute of Technology, California Institute of Technology, ETH Zurich, University of Tokyo, and Peking University. Editorial policy emphasizes original contributions comparable to those in Journal of the American Chemical Society and Chemical Communications, with peer review managed by an editorial board composed of scholars affiliated with organizations like the Royal Society of Chemistry, American Chemical Society, and the German Research Foundation. Manuscript types include full papers, communications, reviews, and minireviews reflecting methodologies employed in laboratories resembling those of Linus Pauling-era structural studies, Roald Hoffmann-style theoretical analyses, and modern techniques paralleling work from groups associated with IBM Research, Bell Labs, and national laboratories such as Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
Published on a weekly schedule, the journal issues volumes and numbers akin to practices at Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences and Cell Press titles, offering online and print editions distributed by Wiley-VCH from locations tied to publishing centers in Weinheim and operations connected to parent companies with histories alongside John Wiley & Sons. Article presentation follows conventions similar to those used in Accounts of Chemical Research and Chemical Reviews, with graphical abstracts, supporting information, and editorial highlights mirroring formats adopted by Nature Chemistry and Science Advances. Digital identifiers and production standards align with metadata systems used by CrossRef and indexing partners associated with databases maintained by institutions such as Clarivate Analytics and Elsevier.
The journal is indexed in major bibliographic services comparable to platforms like Web of Science, Scopus, PubMed, and Chemical Abstracts Service, participating in citation tracking frameworks used by scholars at Columbia University, University of California, and Imperial College London. Inclusion in these services places the journal alongside other high-profile titles indexed for impact metrics by organizations such as Thomson Reuters and analytics produced in conjunction with entities like Clarivate. Libraries and consortia managed by entities like the Library of Congress and networks such as COPE integrate the journal into discovery systems employed by research groups at University of Oxford and University of Chicago.
The journal's impact factor and citation metrics are frequently compared with those of Journal of the American Chemical Society, Chemical Communications, and Nature Communications; evaluations inform hiring and funding decisions at institutions including National Institutes of Health, European Research Council, and national academies like the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina. Critical reception highlights influential contributions that shaped subfields studied in laboratories like those at Riken, Argonne National Laboratory, and Sandia National Laboratories, and references to the journal appear in review articles and award citations involving prizes such as the Nobel Prize, Wolf Prize, and Priestley Medal.
The journal has published landmark reports on synthetic methodologies, catalytic systems, materials such as metal–organic frameworks and perovskites studied by groups at University of California, Berkeley, University of Manchester, and Tohoku University, and mechanistic investigations resonant with work by researchers related to Richard F. Heck, Ei-ichi Negishi, and Yoshinori Ohsumi. Seminal communications introduced concepts exploited in technologies developed by companies like DuPont, BASF, and Siemens, and informed cross-disciplinary advances intersecting with research programs at NASA, European Space Agency, and industrial research arms of General Electric. Influential review articles have synthesized progress on topics championed by scientists such as Ahmed Zewail, Frances Arnold, and Carolyn Bertozzi, shaping curricula at universities such as Harvard, Yale University, and Stanford University.
Category:Chemistry journals