Generated by GPT-5-mini| Nature Electronics | |
|---|---|
| Title | Nature Electronics |
| Discipline | Electronics |
| Abbreviation | Nat. Electron. |
| Publisher | Nature Portfolio |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| History | 2018–present |
| Frequency | Monthly |
| Issn | 2520-1131 |
Nature Electronics Nature Electronics is a monthly peer-reviewed scientific journal covering research in electronics, semiconductor devices, optoelectronics, and systems integration. Launched in 2018, the journal publishes original research, reviews, perspectives, and commentaries that intersect with industry developments and policy debates. It is part of a family of journals published by Nature Portfolio and operates within the editorial and production infrastructure associated with Springer Nature.
Nature Electronics positions itself at the intersection of academic research and industrial innovation, engaging communities from Stanford University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, University of Cambridge, Tsinghua University, and ETH Zurich. The journal targets researchers working on topics relevant to companies such as Intel, Samsung Electronics, TSMC, NVIDIA, and IBM. Editorially, the title draws on expertise linked to institutions including IEEE, ACM, Royal Society, Max Planck Society, and Chinese Academy of Sciences to curate material that spans laboratory-scale demonstrations and prototype development. Contributors often reference milestones associated with entities like Bell Labs, Fairchild Semiconductor, Texas Instruments, Rambus, and ARM Holdings.
The journal covers a broad array of subjects including device physics exemplified by work from groups at California Institute of Technology, fabrication methods tied to ASML, materials science advances connected to Samsung SDI and BASF, and circuit and system-level innovations from researchers at Qualcomm and Broadcom. Typical topics include two-dimensional materials research related to Graphene Flagship, spintronics studies linked to University of Cambridge (department), neuromorphic engineering in the vein of projects at Intel Labs and IBM Research, photonics research akin to programs at Bell Labs Research and Optical Society (OSA), and energy-harvesting electronics reminiscent of initiatives from Fraunhofer Society. The journal also publishes work addressing standards and interoperability where organizations such as 3GPP, IEEE 802, JEDEC, and ISO are relevant.
Announced by Nature Portfolio in 2018, the journal followed the launch model of earlier titles like Nature Nanotechnology, Nature Materials, and Nature Electronics's sibling journals by offering a mix of research articles and magazine-style features. Its first issues showcased research associated with breakthroughs reported from laboratories at MIT Lincoln Laboratory, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, and Riken. The publishing cadence is monthly, coordinated through offices connected to London, New York City, and regional editorial teams collaborating with hubs in Tokyo and Beijing. Production workflows leverage services and infrastructure used across Springer Nature imprints and subscribe to indexing practices upheld by databases such as Web of Science, Scopus, and PubMed Central-adjacent repositories for linked materials.
The editorial board comprises academic and industry editors drawn from universities and corporations including University of Illinois Urbana–Champaign, Seoul National University, National University of Singapore, Samsung Electronics Research Institute, and Microsoft Research. Advisory and associate editors often have prior affiliations with organizations like DARPA, European Research Council, and National Science Foundation, reflecting interdisciplinary oversight. The peer-review process follows single- or double-blind models customary in journals such as Nature Communications and Science Advances, employing external referees from research centers like Argonne National Laboratory and Oak Ridge National Laboratory to evaluate manuscripts for rigor, novelty, and reproducibility. Editorial policies address issues raised by bodies including Committee on Publication Ethics and reference standards similar to those endorsed by CrossRef and ORCID.
Nature Electronics has been cited in discourse across academia and industry, with articles informing policy discussions in forums like World Economic Forum panels and influencing research agendas at funding agencies such as European Commission, National Institutes of Health, and Japan Science and Technology Agency. The journal's impact metrics are compared alongside titles such as IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices, Advanced Materials, and ACS Nano. Reception among researchers has noted the journal's role in elevating translational work spanning start-ups incubated at entities like Y Combinator and spin-outs from Cambridge Enterprise. Critiques have mirrored debates seen around Nature Communications regarding editorial selectivity and the balance between high-impact breakthroughs and incremental advances.
Noteworthy publications include reports on device demonstrations that echo breakthroughs from research groups at Columbia University, University of California, Berkeley, and Peking University, and perspectives synthesizing trends comparable to reviews in Annual Review of Materials Research. Special issues and thematic collections have focused on topics related to quantum computing hardware initiatives akin to projects at Google Quantum AI and D-Wave Systems, flexible electronics reflecting collaborations with E Ink Corporation, and semiconductor scaling strategies paralleling efforts at International Roadmap for Devices and Systems workshops. Guest editorials have featured contributions by leaders affiliated with Nobel Prize-winning institutions and researchers active in consortia like Graphene Council and NanoJapan.
Nature Electronics follows a hybrid access model typical of Nature Portfolio journals, offering subscription-based content alongside open-access options through article processing charges that align with policies from funders such as Wellcome Trust, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and Horizon Europe. Licensing choices include Creative Commons variants comparable to those used in Nature Communications and other Springer Nature titles, and the journal participates in institutional agreements similar to transformative deals negotiated with consortia like Jisc and CAA (Consortium of Academic and Research Libraries in Illinois).
Category:Electronics journals