Nomenclature - ASME



TitleName, first authorAffiliationFull Mailing Addresse-mailASME Membership (if applicable)Name, second authorAffiliationFull Mailing Addresse-mailASME Membership (if applicable)Name, third authorAffiliationFull Mailing Addresse-mailASME Membership (if applicable)Name, add additional authors as necessaryAffiliationFull Mailing Addresse-mailASME Membership (if applicable)ABSTRACTA short abstract (250 words maximum) should open the paper. The purposes of an abstract are: (1) to give a clear indication of the objective, scope, and results of the paper so that readers may determine whether the full text will be of particular interest to them; (2) to provide key words and phrases for indexing, abstracting, and retrieval purposes. The abstract should not attempt to condense the whole subject matter into a few words for quick reading.INTRODUCTIONBecause ASME typesets accepted papers prior to publication, it is not necessary for authors to do more than structural formatting for the body of the paper. Figures and tables should not be inserted in the text, but each should be included on a separate page at the end of the paper. For readability, please be sure to use double spacing.A citation must appear for each reference in the reference section. Citations should be consecutively numbered using square brackets [1]. The sentence punctuation follows the brackets [2]. Multiple references [2, 3] or a range of references [4-7] should appear within a single set of brackets. In sentences, refer simply to the reference number, as in [8]. Do not use “Ref. [9]” or “reference [9]” except at the beginning of a sentence: “Reference [9] shows ... ”. The References should be in a separate section at the end of the paper.Equations should be numbered consecutively beginning with (1) to the end of the paper, including any appendices. The number should be enclosed in parentheses and set flush right in the column on the same line as the equation.LEVEL-ONE HEADSThe text should be organized into logical parts or sections. Headings and subheadings should appear throughout the paper to divide the subject matter to emphasize the major elements. These headings assist the reader in following the trend of thought and in forming a mental picture of the points of importance. Parts or sections may be numbered, if desired, but paragraphs should not be numbered.COPYRIGHT REMINDERIf any material that is included in a paper is under copyright, the authors of the paper are responsible for obtaining copyright permissions, including any information required by the copyright holder, and be able to produce such permissions upon request.Level-Two HeadsAll papers should be concise regardless of length. Long quotations should be avoided by referring to sources. Illustrations and tables, where they help clarify the meaning or are necessary to demonstrate results properly, are desirable, but they should be kept to a practicable minimum, and included on individual pages at the end of the manuscript.Level-Three HeadsIt is ASME policy that SI units of measurement be included in all papers with the U.S. customary units provided in parentheses or in a supplementary table. ACKNOWLEDGMENTPlease spell “acknowledgment” in American English is without an “e” after the “g” using it in the singular for the heading even if there are multiple acknowledgments. Specific company names should be mentioned only in the acknowledgment and not in the body of the manuscript. FUNDINGA separate section listing funding sources should be included. The full names along with their abbreviation should be included, e.g., U.S. Department of Energy (DOE). NOMENCLATUREVvariables should appear in first column with the description in second column, mIall variables should appear in italicstltwo-letter abbreviations should appear in italicstlathree-letter abbreviations should not appear in italicsReReynolds number and similar abbreviations do not use italicsTuse the “Tab” key to add more rows to this tableREFERENCES(Samples of the most commonly referenced materials are provided. If in doubt, please refer to the latest editor of the Chicago Manual of Style. DOIs should be provided whenever possible for the greatest accuracy.[1] Ning, X., and Lovell, M. R., 2002, "On the Sliding Friction Characteristics of Unidirectional Continuous FRP Composites," ASME Journal of Tribology, 124(1), pp. 5-13. DOI: 10.1115/1.40224567[2] Barnes, M., 2001, "Stresses in Solenoids," J. Appl. Phys., 48(5), pp. 2000-2008. DOI: 10.1115/1.40224567[3] Jones, J., 2000, Contact Mechanics, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, Chap. 6. ISBN: 978-3-16-148410-0[4] Lee, Y., Korpela, S. A., and Horne, R. N., 1982, "Structure of Multi-Cellular Natural Convection in a Tall Vertical Annulus," Proc. 7th International Heat Transfer Conference, U. Grigul et al., eds., Hemisphere, Washington, DC, 2, pp. 221-226.[5] Hashish, M., 2000, "600 MPa Waterjet Technology Development," High Pressure Technology, PVP-Vol. 406, pp. 135-140.[6] Watson, D. W., 1997, "Thermodynamic Analysis," ASME Paper No. 97-GT-288.[7] Tung, C. Y., 1982, "Evaporative Heat Transfer in the Contact Line of a Mixture," Ph.D. thesis, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY.[8] Kwon, O. K., and Pletcher, R. H., 1981, "Prediction of the Incompressible Flow Over A Rearward-Facing Step," Technical Report No. HTL-26, CFD-4, Iowa State Univ., Ames, IA.[9] Smith, R., 2002, "Conformal Lubricated Contact of Cylindrical Surfaces Involved in a Non-Steady Motion," Ph.D. thesis, Captions ListFig. 1Capitalize only the first word in the captionFig. 2Punctuation is not used if the caption is a single sentenceFig. 3Punctuation is used if a caption contains multiple sentences. Punctuation is used to separate the multiple sentences.Fig. 4Fig. 5Fig. 6use “Tab” key to add more rowsTable Caption ListTable 1Capitalize the first word in the captionTable 2Punctuation is not included if the is only a single line in the captionTable 3Table notes should use superscript lowercase roman letters a, b, cTable 4Table 5Table 6use “Tab” key to add more rowsInformation Regarding Figures and TablesEach figure and table should be included on a separate sheet (one figure or table per page) at the end of the manuscript.Tables can be created using Microsoft Word.Figures (graphics files) must be saved as a TIFF, PostScript, or EPS (Encapsulated PostScript) files for uploading individually if the paper is accepted for publicationASME Papers are targeted for 9 typeset pages, which is approximately 9000 words (9 typeset pages). Using 1000 words for each typeset page, figures can be estimated at ~250 “words” for each quarter of a column they will occupy.Text in figures should be reviewed for legibility for reproduction in the following sizes:Single Column20 picas8 cm3.25 inDouble Column40 picas16 cm wide6.5 in. ................
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