Aims & Scope
Science and Technology Journal (STJ) is an international, peer-reviewed, open-access journal committed to publishing high-quality, original research that advances knowledge across the sciences, engineering, and technology. The journal provides a platform for disseminating rigorously evaluated studies that combine scientific excellence with potential societal, industrial, or environmental impact.
Objectives
STJ seeks to:
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Publish innovative and methodologically sound research articles, short communications, and invited reviews.
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Encourage interdisciplinary studies that bridge the natural sciences, engineering, and applied technologies.
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Facilitate the global exchange of knowledge between researchers, educators, industry professionals, and policymakers.
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Support contributions that demonstrate rigor, reproducibility, and relevance to contemporary scientific and technological challenges.
Scope
The journal welcomes submissions from a wide range of disciplines, including but not limited to:
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Physical Sciences: physics, chemistry, materials science, nuclear sciences, earth sciences, and mathematics.
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Engineering & Technology: mechanical, electrical, civil, chemical, nanotechnology, renewable energy, and emerging interdisciplinary technologies.
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Life Sciences: plant and animal sciences, molecular biology, biotechnology, biochemistry, physiology, proteomics, genomics, and bioinformatics (with experimental validation).
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Environmental & Applied Sciences: environmental science, climate change, ecology, agriculture, forestry, and horticulture.
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Data & Computational Sciences: statistics, modeling, and computational methods that directly complement or validate experimental work.
Out of Scope
To maintain high editorial and scientific standards, STJ does not consider manuscripts in the following categories:
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Purely theoretical, computational, or simulation-based studies without experimental validation.
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Medical and clinical research, including case studies, diagnostic trials, and therapeutic interventions.
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Defense and weapon-related research.
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Studies based on crude biological extracts without adequate chemical or molecular characterization (e.g., GC-MS, LC-MS, NMR, or equivalent).
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Bioinformatics analyses without experimental confirmation, such as gene expression or functional validation.
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Routine or incremental studies that lack novelty, broader impact, or scientific advancement.
LOCKSS – Library archiving for permanence
OpenAIRE – Open Access compliance