The graph shows the changes in the impact factor of Materials Science & Engineering A: Structural Materials: Properties, Microstructure and Processing and its the corresponding percentile for the sake of comparison with the entire literature. Impact Factor is the most common scientometric index, which is defined by the number of citations of papers in two preceding years divided by the number of papers published in those years.
How Influential is Materials Science & Engineering A: Structural Materials: Properties, Microstructure and Processing?
Materials Science & Engineering A: Structural Materials: Properties, Microstructure and Processing is the 25th out of 320 Mechanics of Materials journals. This means the journal is among the top 8% in the sub-discipline of Mechanics of Materials. This Journal is the 31st out of 546 Mechanics journals. This means the journal is among the top 6% in the sub-discipline of Mechanics. This Journal is the 34th out of 428 Condensed Matter Physics journals. This means the journal is among the top 8% in the sub-discipline of Condensed Matter Physics. This Journal is the 39th out of 667 Mechanical Engineering journals. This means the journal is among the top 6% in the discipline of Mechanical Engineering. This Journal is the 124th out of 2,076 Physics journals. This means the journal is among the top 6% in the discipline of Physics. This Journal is the 167th out of 1,481 Materials Science journals. This means the journal is among the top 12% in the discipline of Materials Science. This Journal is the 267th out of 3,258 Chemistry journals. This means the journal is among the top 9% in the discipline of Chemistry. This Journal is the 315th out of 5,488 Applied Sciences journals. This means the journal is among the top 6% in the science branch of Applied Sciences. This Journal is the 668th out of 12,155 Physical Sciences journals. This means the journal is among the top 6% in the science branch of Physical Sciences.
How are inpact factors calculated?
The impact factor (IF) is calculated by counting citations from peer-reviewed journals only.
extended IF also counts citations from books and conference papers. However, no patent, abstract, working papers, online documents, etc., are covered.