JMEST Template - Final (2020)
JMEST Template - Final (2020)
Article history:
Received: xx xxxx xxxx / Received in revised form: xx xxxx xxxx / Accepted: xx xxxx xxxx (to be inserted by
publisher)
The abstract should be comprehensive but concise no more than 300 words and should be structured to
give a brief introduction to the study, main findings of the study, conclusions drawn from the study and
their significance. Do not include references, headings, and non-standard abbreviation. While the abstract
is conceptually divided into three sections (Background, Methodology/Principal Findings, and
Conclusions/ Significance), please do not apply these distinct headings to the abstract within the article
file. Please do not include any citations and avoid specialist abbreviations. → (10 pts)
Keywords: Put your keywords here, keywords are separated by semicolon, 5-7 words → (10 pts)
DOI: 10.17977/um016v
2 Journal of Mechanical Engineering Science and Technology ISSN 2580-0817
Vol. #, No. #, July 20##, pp. ##-##
Figures should be as small and simple as is compatible with clarity. The goal is for
figures to be comprehensible to readers in other or related disciplines, and to assist their
understanding of the paper. Unnecessary figures and parts (panels) of figures should be
avoided: data presented in small tables or histograms, for instance, can generally be stated
briefly in the text instead. Avoid unnecessary complexity, coloring and excessive detail.
Figures and tables must be centered in the column. Graphics may be full color. The
image should be in adequate resolution (min 300 dpi). The low-resolution image which
would not be acceptable. When you check your paper, please ensure that: the colors used
in each figure contrast well, the image used in each figure is clear, and all text labels in
each figure are legible.
G. Figure Captions
Figures should be as small and simple as is compatible with clarity. The goal is for
figures to be comprehensible to readers in other or related disciplines, and to assist their
understanding of the paper. Unnecessary figures and parts (panels) of figures should be
avoided: data presented in small tables or histograms, for instance, can generally be stated
briefly in the text instead. Avoid unnecessary complexity, coloring, and excessive detail.
Figures must be numbered using Arabic numerals. Figure captions must be in 11 pt
Regular font. Captions of a single line (e.g. Fig. 1) must be centered whereas multi-line
captions must be justified (e.g. Fig. 1). Captions with figure numbers must be placed after
their associated figures, as shown in Figure 1.
Fig. 2. A sample line graph using colors which contrast well both on screen and on a black-and-
white hardcopy → (11 pts)
(Source: if you use a figure that has been adapted from copied from another source) → (11 pts
H. Table Captions
The table title should be concise, no more than one sentence. The rest of the table
legend and any footnotes should be placed below the table. Footnotes can be used to
explain abbreviations.
E/kJ
1 -152.7x -
1 10 1.26954 0.982
1.429
22.6223 1 -2721.x +
2 10 0.768
9 6.027
(Source: If you use a table that has been adapted or copied from another source) → (11 pts)
"equation (1)", not "(1)", in the sentences. Equations should be placed flush-left with the
text margin. Equations are centered and numbered consecutively starting from 1. Number
equations consecutively with equation numbers in parentheses.
E=m. c 2 ………………………….................................................................... (1)
IV. Conclusions
Conclusion section should bring out the significance of your research paper, show how
you’ve brought closure to the research problem, and point out remaining gaps in
knowledge by suggesting issues for further research. The conclusion should be written in
paragraphs instead of numbering. Moreover, it can also be added to the prospect of the
development of research results and application prospects of further studies into the next
(based on result and discussion).
Acknowledgment
The authors should first acknowledge the source of funding for the research presented
in their article followed by any personal credits.
References
The reference list appears at the end of your paper. It provides the information
necessary for a reader to locate and retrieve any source you cite in the body of the paper.
Each source you cite in the paper (with the exception of personal communications) must
appear in your reference list; likewise, each entry in the reference list must be cited in your
text. Only published or accepted manuscript should be included in the reference list. Papers
that have been submitted but not yet accepted should not be cited. Limited citation of
unpublished work should be included in the body of the text only as "unpublished data".
As you write your report, you will cite your references. A citation to a reference in the
body of the text is indicated by a bracketed number corresponding to the reference number
in the References section. Example: During high stress periods, individuals should focus
on the situation-specific tasks rather than rely on general knowledge structures [1].
As you write your report, you will cite your references. A citation to a reference in the
body of the text is indicated by a bracketed number corresponding to the reference number
in the References section. Example: During high-stress periods, individuals should focus
on situation-specific tasks rather than rely on general knowledge structures [1]. When
referring to a reference item, please simply use the reference number, as in [2]. Do not use
“Ref. [3]” or “Reference [3]” except at the beginning of a sentence, e.g. “Reference [3]
shows …”. Multiple references are each numbered with separate brackets (e.g. [2], [3],
[4]–[6]).
The reference list appears at the end of your paper. It provides the information
necessary for a reader to locate and retrieve any source you cite in the body of the paper.
Each source you cite in the paper (with the exception of personal communications) must
appear in your reference list; likewise, each entry in the reference list must be cited in your
text. Only published or accepted manuscript should be included in the reference list. Papers
that have been submitted but not yet accepted should not be cited. Limited citation of
unpublished work should be included in the body of the text only as "unpublished data".
CITATION
Reference Formats
GENERAL INSTRUCTIONS
A complete reference should contain the name(s) of the author(s) and/or editor(s), the
title of the article, the name of the book or conference proceedings where appropriate, and
bibliographic information about the article such as the name of the publisher, the city of
publication, and the page numbers. The basic concept is that the reference should be
sufficiently complete so that the reader could readily find the reference and can judge the
authority and objectivity of the reference.
All author names appear as Last name, Initials. For example, if Kirsten Patrick is the
primary author and Alice M. Agogino is the second author, the correct appearance of the
author names would be K. Patrick, and A.M. Agogino.
Books
Standard format
Authors, Title (in italics), Publisher, City of Publication, Year of Publication, page
numbers (if appropriate).
Example:
1. B.J. Fogg, Persuasive technology: using computers to change what we think and do,
Boston: Morgan Kaufmann Publishers, 2003, pp. 30-35.
Journal articles
Standard format
Authors (Initial name, Last Nama), "Title of the article", Journal name (in italics),
volume (Issue), pages, Month, Year.
Example:
2. A. P. Provin, V. O. dos Reis, S. E. Hilesheim, R. T. Bianchet, A. R. de Aguiar Dutra,
and A. L. V. Cubas, “Use of bacterial cellulose in the textile industry and the
wettability challenge—a review,” Cellulose, vol. 28, no. 13. pp. 8255–8274, Sep.,
2021.
Conference Proceedings
Standard format
Authors, "Title of the article", in Title of the conference(in italics), Publisher, Pages.
Example:
3. P. Leclercq, and Heylighen, "A. 5,8 Analogies per hour: A designer's view on
analogical reasoning", in 7th International Conference on Artificial Intelligence in
Design, Kluwer Academic Publishers, 285-303.
4. S. A. Sardjono, Aminnudin, and M. Muhajir, “Crystallinity and morphology of the
bacterial nanocellulose membrane extracted from pineapple peel waste using high-
pressure homogenizer,” in AIP Conference Proceedings, Jul. 2019, vol. 2120, no. 1,
p. 080015.
E-Books
Standard format
Authors, Title of E-book(in italics), Publisher, Date of original publication. [Format]
Available: Source. Example:
3. T. Eckes, The Developmental Social Psychology of Gender, Lawrence
Erlbaum, 2000. E-journal Standard format
Authors, "Title of Article", Title of Journal(in italics), Volume (Issue), pages, month
year.
[Format] Available: Database Name (if appropriate), article number (if given), internet
address. [Accessed date of access].
Example:
A. Altun, "Understanding hypertext in the context of reading on the web: Language
learners' experience", Current Issues in Education, 6(12), July 2003. [Online].
[Online]. Available: http://cie.ed.asu.edu/volume6/number12/. [Accessed Dec.
2, 2004].
Submission self-checklist
Before submitting your manuscript online, please check that all style and format
requirements have been carefully followed.
∙ English spelling and punctuations are used throughout the paper.
∙ The paper is original, not submitted anywhere else.
∙ The length of the paper is commensurate with content.
∙ The title and headings are brief and catchy.
∙ Names and affiliations (including postal codes) of all authors are correct and complete.
∙ Figures are of sufficient quality for printing, with clear resolution of detail.
∙ Abstract and keywords are provided.
∙ All table captions and figure legends are provided.
∙ Tables/Figures are properly placed and numbered with brief titles/
captions.
∙ References are in IEEE style.