Novel Approaches in Industrial Engineering and its Applications
Novel Approaches in Industrial Engineering and its Applications is peer-reviewed
Journal that provides a platform which aspires to cover all the aspects of recent
innovations in Mechanical engineering.
The Journal includes Engineering Design Process, Textile Industry, Industrial Plant,
Operations Research, Management Engineers, Systems Engineering, Management Science,
Safety Engineering and Materials Management. The scope of the journal covers Research
Articles, Review Articles, Methodology Articles, Short Communications, Case Study/ Case
Reports, Research Reports, Monographs, Special Issues, Editorials research articles,
Reviews, short communications and scientific commentaries in all the areas of Industrial
Engineering and its Technology.
Dr. Omar Rafae Mahmood Alomar
Scientific Researcher
Northern Technical University (NTU), Iraq
Dr. Abhinav
Assistant Professor
Alliance University, Bangalore
Dr. P. Madhu
Assistant Professor
Malnad College of Engineering, Hassan
Dr. N. Alagappan
Assistant Professor
Annamalai University, Annamalai Nagar-Tamil Nadu
Email:
algatesmech06@gmail.com
Dr. T. Kamatchi
Associate Professor
Velammal College of Engineering And Technology, Madurai
Email:
kamatchi1711@gmail.com
DR. K.S.Seetharama
Professor
Dayananda Sagar College of Engineering, Bengaluru
Email:
seetharama@gmail.com
Dr. Arindam Kumar Chanda
Professor & HOD
G. B. Pant Government Engineering College, New Delhi
Dr. Srinivasa C.V
Professor & Head
GM Institute of Technology, Davangere, Karnataka
<
Peer Review Policy
The peer review process for journal publication is essentially a quality control
mechanism.
After an editor receives a manuscript, the first step is to check that the manuscript for
quality, originality, validity and whether appropriate method has been followed. If it does,
then the editor moves to the next step, which is peer review.
Peer review is the critical assessment of manuscripts submitted to journals by experts who
are usually not part of the editorial staff. The editor will send the manuscript to two or
more reviewers. The peer reviewers will then prepare a report that assesses the manuscript,
and return it to the editor.
After reading the peer reviewer's report, the editor will decide to do one of three things:
reject the manuscript, accept the manuscript, or ask the authors to revise and resubmit the
manuscript after responding to the peer reviewers’ feedback.
If the authors resubmit the manuscript, editors will sometimes ask the same peer reviewers
to look over the manuscript again to see if their concerns have been addressed. This is
called re-review.
The final decision on the manuscript is taken by the editor. Only when there are any
conflict issues, the editor-in-chief of the journal is involved.
Journal decision-making process
After a paper is submitted to a journal, the journal editor screens the manuscript and
decides whether rejected if it is found to be of insufficient quality, outside focus and
scope of the Journal or if they are considered not original.
Editors-in-chief have full authority over the entire editorial content of the journal and
the timing of publication of that content with no interference from journal owners.
Editors should defend the confidentiality of authors and peer reviewers (names and reviewer
comments).
Author will receive prompt acknowledgement of submission of articles. If acknowledgement is
not received within two weeks, please contact the Administrative Office, preferably by
e-mail.
AUTHOR GUIDELINES
The manuscript should be in English and prepared on the following lines:-
Title: Title should be brief, specific and informative, the scientific name(s) in
italics/underlined.
Authors: Names of authors to be typed, in capitals unaccompanied by their degrees,
titles etc.
Address: Address of the institution where the work was carried out is given below the
name(s) of author(s). Present address of correspondence should be given as footnote
indicating by asterisk the mark (*), the author to whom the correspondence is to be
addressed.
Abstract: The Abstract should be informative and completely self-explanatory, briefly
present the topic, state the scope of the experiments, indicate significant data, and point
out major findings and conclusions. The Abstract should be in about 100 to 150 words.
Standard nomenclature should be used and abbreviations should be avoided. No literature
should be cited.
Key words: Following the abstract, key words not more than 8 (Eight ) that will
provide indexing references should be listed and in alphabetical order.
Introduction: This should be brief and the review of the literature should be
relevant to the theme of the paper. Extensive review and unnecessary detail of earlier work
should be avoided.
Materials and Methods: It should describe an appropriate methodology etc. but if
known methods have been adopted, only references are cited. It should comprise an
experimental design and techniques with experimental area and institutional with year of
experiment.
Results and Discussion: It should be combined to avoid repetition. The results should
not be repeated in both tables and figures. The discussion should relate to the significance
of the observations.
Conclusion and Acknowledgement:
Table numbers should be followed by the title of the table, Line drawings/photographs should
contain figure number and description thereof. The corresponding number(s) of Tables,
Figures etc should quote in the text. Size of tables and figures should be below 1
MB.
References: Author(s) – Family name and initials. Title of article (Italics). Title
of Journal (Abbreviated) , Publication year; Volume (Issue): Pages.
1. Srivastava N, Diwakar M, Ajnara J. Evaluation of Nanostructured Metal Ceramic Coatings
for solar thermal Applications. IJNS. 2008; 336(7646): 701–4p. (Journal publication less
than three Authors)
2. Hanna JN, McBride WJ, Brookes DL, et al. Hendra virus infection in a veterinarian. Med J
Aust. 2006; 185(10): 562–4p. (Journal publication having more than three Authors)
3.. Srivastava N, Diwakar M. Evaluation of Nanostructured Metal Ceramic Coatings for solar
thermal Applications. Psychol Sport Exerc. 2007;10(4):422–34p.
doi:10.1014/j.psychsport.2007.03.007. (Electronic article – with DOI
number)Page/Line.
Number: Authors are requested to mention Page number and Line number to each line in
the MS for easy and quick review. Text Alignment, line spacing, word count, figures, tables
etc. must be as per format.