Generated by GPT-5-mini| Journal of Catalysis | |
|---|---|
| Title | Journal of Catalysis |
| Discipline | Chemical catalysis |
| Language | English |
| Editor | Paul H. Emmett |
| Publisher | Academic Press |
| Country | United States |
| Frequency | Monthly |
| History | 1962–present |
| Issn | 0021-9517 |
Journal of Catalysis The Journal of Catalysis is a peer-reviewed scientific journal focusing on chemical catalysis and heterogeneous surface science research. Established in 1962, it publishes original research, reviews, and perspectives that intersect with industrial and academic developments involving institutions such as Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Stanford University, California Institute of Technology, University of Cambridge, and ETH Zurich. The journal has been referenced alongside awards and organizations like the Nobel Prize in Chemistry, the Royal Society of Chemistry, the American Chemical Society, the Max Planck Society, and the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry.
The journal was founded amid postwar expansions in chemical research driven by figures linked with Argonne National Laboratory, Los Alamos National Laboratory, DuPont, Shell Oil Company, ExxonMobil Research and Engineering, and General Electric Research Laboratory. Early editorial influence included scholars associated with Harvard University, Columbia University, Princeton University, Yale University, and University of Chicago. Its development paralleled milestones such as the rise of Zeolites studies at Mobil Corporation, the advent of Fischer–Tropsch process investigations at Imperial College London, and catalysis applications in projects by NASA and European Space Agency. The journal's editorial offices have been linked historically to publishing houses including Academic Press and corporate groups connected to Elsevier and Pergamon Press.
The journal covers experimental and theoretical work relevant to heterogeneous catalysis, supported by case studies from laboratories at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Sandia National Laboratories, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, and Argonne National Laboratory. Topics include surface characterization techniques developed at Bell Labs, reaction mechanisms related to Fischer–Tropsch process, catalyst design influenced by research at Dow Chemical Company and BASF, and environmental catalysis in programs like those of the United States Environmental Protection Agency. It addresses synthesis and characterization methods tied to instrumentation from Thermo Fisher Scientific and Agilent Technologies, and modeling approaches connected with software work at IBM Research and Microsoft Research. Applications stretch into energy and materials programs affiliated with National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Shell, and TotalEnergies.
Editors over time have been prominent scientists associated with University of Illinois Urbana–Champaign, University of California, Berkeley, University of Texas at Austin, University of Michigan, and Northwestern University. The editorial board routinely includes scholars affiliated with organizations such as Max Planck Institute for Coal Research, RIKEN, CNRS, Karolinska Institute, and KTH Royal Institute of Technology. The journal issues monthly volumes managed through publishing infrastructures linked to Elsevier and distribution channels used by Springer Nature and Wiley-Blackwell. Peer review processes draw reviewers from networks tied to Royal Society, National Academy of Sciences (United States), American Association for the Advancement of Science, and major research universities.
Journal contents are abstracted and indexed in bibliographic databases maintained by entities including Science Citation Index, Scopus (Elsevier), Chemical Abstracts Service, Web of Science, and PubMed Central for cross-disciplinary reach. Citation metrics appear in reports by Clarivate Analytics and analyses by Google Scholar, while library holdings are tracked through systems at the Library of Congress, British Library, Bibliothèque nationale de France, and university consortia at Oxford University, Cambridge University, and Yale University. Institutional repositories such as those at MIT OpenCourseWare and CaltechTHESIS reference influential papers published in the journal.
The journal has been cited in landmark works connected to laureates of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry and in major reviews published by the Royal Society of Chemistry and the American Chemical Society. Its impact factor and citation performance are reported by Journal Citation Reports compiled by Clarivate Analytics and evaluated in assessments by Times Higher Education and QS World University Rankings for institutional research output. Papers from the journal have informed policy and standards developed by agencies like the European Chemicals Agency and the United States Environmental Protection Agency, and have been discussed at conferences hosted by International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry and Gordon Research Conferences.
The journal has published influential studies on catalytic mechanisms cited alongside classic reports from Linus Pauling-era theories and modern analyses from laboratories at Stanford University and Princeton University. Seminal contributions involved spectroscopy methods pioneered at Bell Labs, computational catalysis work from Los Alamos National Laboratory and Argonne National Laboratory, and materials discoveries associated with researchers at University of Tokyo and Tsinghua University. Highly cited articles have intersected with industrial innovations at ExxonMobil, Chevron, BASF, and Shell, and have been foundational to technologies promoted by Toyota Motor Corporation and Siemens. The journal's archive includes work that influenced textbooks published by Wiley and monographs distributed by Cambridge University Press.
Category:Chemistry journals