Generated by GPT-5-mini| Journal of the Russian Chemical Society | |
|---|---|
| Title | Journal of the Russian Chemical Society |
| Abbreviation | JRCS |
| Discipline | Chemistry |
| Language | Russian, English |
| Publisher | Society of Chemists of Russia |
| Country | Russia |
| History | 1869–present |
| Frequency | Monthly |
| Issn | 0000-0000 |
Journal of the Russian Chemical Society is a peer-reviewed periodical established in the 19th century associated with the Russian chemical community and major scientific institutions. The journal has chronicled research across organic chemistry, inorganic chemistry, physical chemistry, and chemical engineering, serving readers linked to Imperial Russian Academy of Sciences, Saint Petersburg State University, and later to Moscow State University, Russian Academy of Sciences, and industrial research institutes. Contributors and readers have included figures connected to Dmitri Mendeleev, Alexander Butlerov, Nikolai Zinin, Sergey Lebedev, and later researchers affiliated with Vladimir Vernadsky, Igor Tamm, Andrei Sakharov, and other prominent scientists who intersected with chemical research.
The journal traces roots to the late 1860s and the milieu around Dmitri Mendeleev, Alexander Butlerov, Nikolai Zinin, and the establishment of chemical societies in Saint Petersburg, Moscow, and regional centers like Kazan and Kharkov. Throughout the Imperial period it published work by chemists active in events such as collaborations tied to the Franco-Prussian War scientific aftermath and international exhibitions attended by delegates from Germany, France, United Kingdom, and United States. In the Soviet era the journal adapted to institutions including the People's Commissariat for Heavy Industry, the Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Gosplan-era projects, and laboratories connected to industrial programs in Leningrad and Kazan. Editorial policies changed during key moments such as the October Revolution, the Great Patriotic War, and the later Khrushchev Thaw, reflecting shifts seen in other periodicals like Journal of Physical Chemistry and regionally in outlets from Poland and Germany. Post-Soviet restructuring involved partnerships with publishers in Moscow and collaborative indexing with databases originating in United States and United Kingdom.
The journal covers experimental and theoretical studies in organic synthesis tied to traditions from Alexander Butlerov and Dmitri Mendeleev, organometallic chemistry connected to laboratories that collaborated with researchers from Germany and France, catalysis research paralleling work in United States and Japan, physical chemistry topics related to colleagues like Pyotr Kapitsa and Lev Landau themes, and materials chemistry relevant to institutes such as Kurchatov Institute and industrial plants in Chelyabinsk. It publishes articles on analytical methods used by chemists from Imperial Russian Academy of Sciences circles and contemporary reports comparable to those in Angewandte Chemie, Journal of the American Chemical Society, and Chemical Communications. Contributions have included synthetic protocols, thermodynamic studies, spectroscopy work linked to principles used by Niels Bohr-era researchers, and applied papers serving petrochemical, polymer, and pharmaceutical sectors associated with Goskhimprom and later corporate entities like Rostec.
Editorial leadership historically involved chairs and editors drawn from Saint Petersburg State University, Moscow State University, and the Russian Academy of Sciences with ties to chemists who attended international conferences like the Solvay Conferences and collaborated with Nobel laureates from Sweden, Germany, and United Kingdom. The modern editorial board includes professors and researchers affiliated with institutes such as Kurnakov Institute of General and Inorganic Chemistry, Nesmeyanov Institute of Organoelement Compounds, and university departments that maintain exchange with journals like Tetrahedron and Nature Chemistry. The publisher is a learned society or a consortium of academic publishers based in Moscow that works alongside national bodies including the Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation and international distribution partners in United Kingdom and United States.
Historically periodicities shifted from irregular society transactions to regular monthly or bimonthly schedules; contemporary practice is typically monthly with special issues honoring anniversaries of figures such as Dmitri Mendeleev and themes linked to conferences like those held under International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry auspices. Article types include full research papers, communications, reviews, and society notices comparable to formats in Proceedings of the Royal Society A and topical collections similar to those in Accounts of Chemical Research.
The journal is indexed in national and international databases and citation services that track periodicals from Russia and beyond, paralleling indexing practices of Chemical Abstracts Service, Scopus, and Web of Science. Records have been incorporated into bibliographic systems maintained in Moscow and shared with libraries at institutions such as Harvard University, University of Oxford, and the Library of Congress for historical issues.
Over its history the journal published influential work on periodicity and chemical theory associated with Dmitri Mendeleev-era debates, synthetic methods contemporaneous with Alexander Butlerov, polymer chemistry developments aligned with Sergey Lebedev's research, and wartime applied chemistry supporting efforts during the Great Patriotic War. Later articles intersected with themes in solid-state chemistry relevant to researchers like Nikolay Semyonov and advances in spectroscopy and catalysis that paralleled contributions in journals such as Journal of Catalysis and Inorganic Chemistry. The journal has functioned as a national venue influencing curricula at Moscow State University and professional practice across institutes within the Russian Academy of Sciences network.
Back issues are held in national repositories including the Russian State Library, university libraries at Saint Petersburg State University and Moscow State University, and digitized collections partnered with international archives in Europe and North America. Preservation follows standards used by libraries that curate archives for long-running titles like those in Cambridge University Press and major national archives; selected articles appear in translated compilations distributed through academic channels in United Kingdom and United States.
Category:Chemistry journals Category:Russian academic journals