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Angewandte Chemie
Angewandte Chemie is a weekly peer-reviewed chemistry journal with broad scope. Its impact factor is 10.232 (in 2006), which is the highest value for a chemistry-specific journal that publishes original research.[1] It is a journal of the de:Gesellschaft Deutscher Chemiker (German Chemical Society) and is today published by Wiley-VCH. Besides original research in the form of short "communications", the journal contains review-type articles (reviews, minireviews, essays, highlights), and a magazine section (news, obituaries, book reviews, conference reports). Colloquially, the journal is simply called "Angewandte". Angewandte Chemie is German for applied chemistry, although this translation no longer really describes the scope of the journal. It is edited by Dr. Peter Gölitz, who is credited with elevating the impact and international scope of its authorship. The journal prides itself to have brought numerous innovations to scientific journals publishing. Since 1977, a single article is featured with a graphic on the cover. Also since that date, the table of contents has been richly annotated with graphics and text. At the start of its online version in 1998, Angewandte Chemie adopted a keyword catalogue to characterize articles and to make them searchable more easily. Additional recommended knowledge
EditionsThe journal appears in two editions with separate volume and page numbering: a German edition "Angewandte Chemie" (ISSN 0044-8249 (print), 1521-3757 (online), CODEN: ANCEAD) with the magazine and review sections as well as some original research in German, and a fully English-language edition "Angewandte Chemie International Edition" (ISSN and CODEN: see infobox). Both editions are identical in contents with the exception of occasional reviews of a German-language books or German translations of IUPAC recommendations. Only one edition is listed in abstracting and indexing services such as PubMed, Web of Science, or Chemical Abstracts Service; typically the International Edition. Business ModelAngewandte Chemie is available by subscription online and in print. Authors may choose to pay a fee to make articles available free of charge ("funded access"). Angewandte Chemie provides open access to supporting information, but access to the graphical table of contents, with an image and editor's summary for each paper, requires a subscription. Publication HistoryIn 1887, Ferdinand Fischer founded "Zeitschrift für die Chemische Industrie" (Journal for the Chemical Industry). In 1888, the title was changed to "Zeitschrift für Angewandte Chemie" (Journal of Applied Chemistry), and volume numbering started over. This title was kept until the end of 1941 when it was changed to "Die Chemie". Until 1920, the journal was published by J. Springer Verlag, and by Verlag Chemie starting in 1921. The issues from April 1945 to December 1946 were not published as a result of World War II. In 1947, publication was resumed as "Angewandte Chemie".[2] In 1962, the English-language edition was launched as Angewandte Chemie International Edition in English (ISSN 0570-0833, CODEN ACIEAY, abbreviated as Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. Engl.), which has a separate volume counting. With beginning of Vol. 37 (1998) "in English" was dropped from the journal name. Mergers: "Chemische Technik / Chemische Apparatur" (1947), "Zeitschrift für Chemie" (1990) Spin-offs: "Chemie Ingenieur Technik" (1949; in English since 1987: "Chemical Engineering & Technology"), "Nachrichten aus Chemie, Technik und Laboratorium" (1977, membership journal of the GDCh), "Advanced Materials" (1988), "Chemistry - A European Journal" (1995), "ChemPhysChem" and "ChemBioChem" (2000), "ChemMedChem" and "Chemistry -- An Asian Journal" (2006), ChemSusChem (2008). Most of the spin-off journals are published on behalf of European chemical societies. CriticismSome say, Angewandte's impact factor is as high as it is in comparison to other chemistry journals because the journal contains reviews. While it is true that reviews are, on average, cited more often than original research articles, the editors claim this effect is too small to explain the difference or affect the ranking of the journal in its subject group.[3] Traditionally, communications in Angewandte have not had abstracts associated with the article itself (communications once were as short as 1/4 of a printed page). The editors are criticized for not making the graphics and texts reproduced in the table of contents freely available as abstracts instead. Top ten most highly cited papersThe ten most highly cited papers (all reviews not original work) in the Angewandte are [4]
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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Angewandte_Chemie". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia. |