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Journal of Physical Chemistry

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Journal of Physical Chemistry
TitleJournal of Physical Chemistry
DisciplinePhysical chemistry
AbbreviationJ. Phys. Chem.
PublisherAmerican Chemical Society
CountryUnited States
History1896–present (series split 1997–2010; reunified 2010s)
FrequencyWeekly/biweekly (varied)
Impact(varied)

Journal of Physical Chemistry The Journal of Physical Chemistry is a peer-reviewed scientific periodical publishing research in Physical chemistry and related subfields, founded in the late 19th century and managed by the American Chemical Society. The journal has intersected with institutions such as Harvard University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Caltech, University of California, Berkeley, and laboratories including Bell Labs and Los Alamos National Laboratory. Its articles have been cited alongside works from publishers like Nature (journal), Science (journal), Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Physical Review Letters, and Analytical Chemistry.

History

The publication began during an era featuring figures such as Wilhelm Ostwald, Svante Arrhenius, J. Willard Gibbs, Pierre Curie, and Marie Curie, and developed through connections with organizations like the American Chemical Society, Royal Society of Chemistry, Deutsche Chemische Gesellschaft, Society of Chemical Industry, and universities such as Yale University and Columbia University. Throughout the 20th century the journal paralleled advances tied to events and institutions like the Manhattan Project, the Industrial Revolution, World War II, and the postwar expansion of research at Stanford University and Princeton University. Editorial leadership has overlapped with chemists affiliated with Johns Hopkins University, University of Chicago, University of Oxford, University of Cambridge, and ETH Zurich. In the late 1990s the title split into multiple series similar to reorganizations seen at Journal of the American Chemical Society and Chemical Reviews; this change mirrored graduate-era growth at institutions including Imperial College London and École Normale Supérieure.

Scope and content

The journal covers topics ranging from molecular spectroscopy and thermodynamics to surface science, catalysis, and materials chemistry, often citing parallel work at Bell Labs, IBM Research, General Electric Research Laboratory, Sandia National Laboratories, and Argonne National Laboratory. Articles frequently engage with methodologies developed by researchers at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, California Institute of Technology, University of Cambridge, ETH Zurich, and University of Tokyo, and relate to theoretical frameworks advanced by names associated with Nobel Prize in Chemistry, Nobel Prize in Physics, Wolf Prize in Chemistry, Davy Medal, and ACS National Meeting awardees. The scope includes experimental studies tied to facilities such as Brookhaven National Laboratory, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, as well as computational work influenced by projects at Los Alamos National Laboratory and centers at Princeton University.

Publication and editorial practices

Publication policies have been shaped by standards shared with journals like Nature (journal), Science (journal), Physical Review Letters, and Journal of the American Chemical Society; editorial boards have featured scientists affiliated with Harvard University, Stanford University, University of California, Berkeley, Columbia University, and University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. Peer review processes mirror practices endorsed by organizations such as the Committee on Publication Ethics and editorial conventions observed at Royal Society, Springer Nature, and Wiley-Blackwell. The journal has issued special issues coordinated with conferences like the American Chemical Society National Meeting, symposia at Gordon Research Conferences, and workshops at CERN and has adopted digital publishing platforms similar to those used by Wiley Online Library and SpringerLink.

Abstracting and indexing

The journal is indexed in major services comparable to Chemical Abstracts Service, Web of Science, Scopus, PubMed, and CrossRef; bibliometric records interact with databases maintained by institutions like Clarivate Analytics and Elsevier. Abstracting entries correspond with library catalogs at Library of Congress, British Library, Bibliothèque nationale de France, and university repositories at Harvard University and Yale University.

Impact and reception

Over its history the journal's influence has been assessed in contexts alongside Journal Citation Reports rankings, comparisons with Nature Materials, Advanced Materials, and Angewandte Chemie, and impact metrics tracked by Scopus and Google Scholar. Its reception among researchers at MIT, Caltech, Oxford University, Cambridge University, and Max Planck Society institutes reflects use in curricula and citation networks tied to awardees of the Nobel Prize and recipients of the Priestley Medal and Perkin Medal.

Notable articles and contributions

The publication has hosted landmark papers that contributed to topics explored by scientists at Bell Labs, IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, and academic groups at Harvard University and Stanford University. Notable contributions have intersected with developments associated with Arrhenius equation, Gibbs free energy, Franck–Condon principle, Marcus theory, and experimental milestones paralleling work by Linus Pauling, Richard Feynman, Ahmed Zewail, John Pople, and Rudolph A. Marcus.

The journal's organizational changes produced related series and successor titles comparable to splits and mergers seen with Journal of Chemical Physics, Journal of the American Chemical Society, Chemical Reviews, Accounts of Chemical Research, and Langmuir; these titles share editorial lineage with divisions of the American Chemical Society and research communities at University of California system, State University of New York, and University of Texas at Austin.

Category:Chemistry journals Category:American Chemical Society academic journals