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As part of the submission process, authors are required to check off their submission's compliance with all of the following items, and submissions may be returned to authors that do not adhere to these guidelines.

  • Naskah belum pernah diterbitkan sebelumnya, dan tidak sedang dalam pertimbangan untuk diterbitkan di jurnal lain (atau sudah dijelaskan dalam Komentar kepada Editor).
  • File naskah dalam format dokumen OpenOffice, Microsoft Word, atau RTF.
  • Referensi yang dapat diakses online telah dituliskan URL-nya.
  • Naskah diketik dengan teks 1 spasi; font 12; menggunakan huruf miring, bukan huruf bergaris bawah (kecuali alamat URL); dan semua ilustrasi, gambar, dan tabel diletakkan dalam teks pada tempat yang diharapkan, bukan dikelompokkan tersendiri di akhir naskah.
  • Naskah mengikuti aturan gaya selingkung dan bibliografi yang disyaratkan dalam Panduan Penulis.
  1. Author may submit the manuscript to METALURGI, have to send original soft file manuscript (doc, docx). The checklist have to be checked.  
  2. Named should be state without academic degree, affiliation address and position should be state clearely after Title (Times New Roman (TNR) 1 space, sizes 12 font. 
  3. Manuscript should contain at least 2.000 words and should not exceed 10 pages including embedded figures and tables, without any appendix, and the file should be in Microsoft Office (.doc/.docx) or Open Office (.odt) format. It should be prepared  in A4 paper (21cm x 29.7cm) using 2.5 cm for inside margin and 2 cm for top, bottom, and outside margins.
  4. Mathematical equation should be clearly written, numbered orderly, and accompanied with any information needed.
  5. Header and footer including page number must not be used. All hypertext links and section bookmarks will be removed from papers. If you need to refer to an Internet email address or URL in your paper, you must type out the address or URL fully in Regular font.
  6. Citation and Reference are written according to IEEE style
  • Citations numbering should be numbered in [1], [2], [3], ... format, according to appearance order.
  • Wikipedia, personal blog, or non scientific website is not allowed to be taken into account.
  • Primary references should be at least 80% from at least ten references.
  • References shoul be taken from the late five years.
  • Detail referencing manual can be seen in the Author Guidelines
 

1. Abstract

Abstract should be written in English with TNR 10 space 1 followed by keywords written in italics. The content of the abstract summarizes briefly and clearly about:

  • Purpose and Scope of Research
  • Methodology
  • Results
  • Conclusion

2. Introduction

The contents of the introduction clearly describe:

  • Problem and scope
  • Current scientific status
  • Hypothesis
  • Expected approach
  • Expected results
  • The research procedures are written clearly therefore each experimental step can be understood.

3. Results and Discussion

Arranged in detail as follows:

  • Tables is written above the table, left aligned with TNR 10 space 1. The word Table is written in bold. The end of the sentence is not marked with a period.

Example: Table 1. Hardness of SS 316L

  • Captions for images is written below the image, left aligned with TNR 10 space 1 in line with text. The word Figure is written in bold. The end of the sentence is not marked with a period.

Example: Figure 1. SS 316L microstructure

  • Discussion section interprets the findings and explain their significance to answer the problems described in the Introduction.
  • The findings may be compared with work previously done by other researchers.

4. Conclusion

Contains brief and clear about:

  • The problem statement addressed in the paper
  • Summarize your overall arguments or findings
  1. Abbreviation and unit. Abbreviations follows international rules and the International System of Units must be used.
  2. Citations. Citations are written using the IEEE format. Citations numbering should be numbered in [1], [2], [3], ... format, according to appearance order. Citation numbers are written before the end of the sentence without spaces, with square brackets, and not bold.

Example: SS 316LSS 316L steel microstructure[2].

5. References

We recommend Citation Software such as Mendeley. The writing rule is as follows:

  • Book

Author(s). book titles. Location: Publishing company, year, pp.

Example: W.K. Chen. Linear Networks and Systems. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth, 1993, pp. 123-35.

  • Book Chapters

Author(s). “Chapter title” in Book title, edition, volume. Editor's name, Ed. Publishing location: Publishing company, year, pp.

Example:

J.E. Bourne. “Synthetic structure of industrial plastics,” in Plastics, 2nd ed., vol. 3. J. Peters, Ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1964, pp. 15-67.

  • Articles in a Journal

Author(s). “Article title”. Journal title, vol., pp, date.

Example:

G. Pevere. "Infrared Nation." The International Journal of Infrared Design, vol. 33, pp. 56-99, Jan. 1979

  • Articles from Conference Proceedings (published)

Author(s). “Article titles.” Conference proceedings, year, pp.

Example:

D.B. Payne and H.G. Gunhold. “Digital sundials and broadband technology,” in Proc.IOOC-ECOC, 1986, pp. 557-998.

 

  • Papers Presented at Conferences (unpublished)

Author(s). “Paper's title,” Conference name, Location, year.

Example:

B. Brandli and M. Dick. “Engineering names and concepts,” presented at the 2nd Int. Conf. Engineering Education, Frankfurt, Germany, 1999.

  • Standards/Patents

Author(s)/Inventor(s). “Name/Title.” Country where the patent is registered. Patent number, date.

Example:

E.E. Rebecca. “Alternating current fed power supply.” U.S. Patent 7 897 777, Nov. 3, 1987.

  • Electronic References

- Books

Author. (year, Month day). book titles. (edition). [Type of medium]. Vol. (issues). Available: site/path/file [date accessed]. 

Example:

S. Calmer. (1999, June 1). Engineering and Arts. (2nd edition). [Online]. 27(3). Available: www.enggart.com/examples/students.html [May 21, 2003].

- Journals

Author. (year, month). “Article titles.” Journal titles. [Type of medium]. Vol. (issue), pages. Available: site/path/file [date accessed]. 

Example:

A. Paul. (1987, Oct.). “Electrical properties of flying machines.” Flying Machines. [Online]. 38(1), pp. 778-998. Available: www.flyingmachjourn/properties/fly.edu [Dec. 1, 2003].

- World Wide Web

Author(s)*.“Titles.” Internet: Complete URL, date updated* [date accessed]. 

M. Duncan. “Engineering Concepts on Ice. Internet: www.iceengg.edu/staff.html , Oct. 25, 2000 [Nov. 29, 2003].

  • Odd Sources

- Newspapers

Author(s)*. “Article titles.” Newspaper (month, year), sections, pages.

Examples:

B.Bart. “Going Faster.” Globe and Mail (Oct. 14, 2002), sec. A p.1.“Telehealth in Alberta.” Toronto Star (Nov. 12, 2003), sec. G pp. 1-3. 

- Dissertations and Theses

Author. “Title.” Degree level, school, location, year.

Example:

S. Mack. “Desperate Optimism.” M.A. thesis, University of Calgary, Canada, 2000.

- Lecture

Lecturer(s). Occasion, Topic: “Lecture title.” Location, date.

Example:

S. Maw. Engg 251. Class Lecture, Topic: “Speed skating.” ICT 224, Faculty of Engineering, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Oct. 31, 2003.