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Dalton Transactions is a Transformative Journal, and Plan S compliant
Impact factor: 3.5*
Time to first decision (all decisions): 16.0 days**
Time to first decision (peer reviewed only): 22.0 days***
Chair: Russell Morris
Indexed in Web of Science, Scopus, and MEDLINE/PubMed
Open access publishing options available
Calls for papers
Dalton Transactions frequently has open calls for papers for upcoming themed collections. Explore our current calls for papers to contribute your best research or reviews. Follow the link for details about the scope and deadlines for each collection.
If you are interested in submitting to one of our themed collections, please email dalton-rsc@rsc.org.
Journal scope
Dalton Transactions is a journal for all areas of inorganic chemistry, which encompasses the organometallic, bioinorganic and materials chemistry of the elements, with applications including synthesis, catalysis, energy conversion/storage, electrical devices and medicine. Dalton Transactions welcomes high-quality, original submissions in all of these areas and more, where the advancement of knowledge in inorganic chemistry is significant. Specific guidance for some areas of our scope is given below.
Solid-state inorganic materials (including nanomaterials)
We encourage work in the area of solid-state, materials and nano-chemistry that includes a significant inorganic chemistry component. Contributions could include the synthesis, characterisation, and applications of new inorganic or inorganic-organic hybrid solids, together with studies of their properties. However, studies of properties of known compounds are only encouraged if there is a clear advance in the inorganic chemistry, and where this forms a major component of both the novelty and significance in the paper.
Catalysis
Studies that utilize well-characterized inorganic and organometallic compounds as catalysts for chemical transformations are welcome but must emphasize the advancement of knowledge in inorganic chemistry. This would include catalyst design and synthesis, structure-activity relationships and/or mechanistic studies.
Work reporting new catalysts for well-studied reactions must contextualize the reported results within the state-of-the-art to demonstrate impact and advancement. Studies that generate ill-defined species in situ and/or report tables of catalytic data without appropriate comparison with existing catalysts will not be considered at Dalton Transactions.
Bioinorganic and medicinal inorganic chemistry
We welcome work on model compounds of metalloenzymes and biologically active inorganic compounds, including reports on their synthesis, characterization and studies of their applications. Spectroscopic or computational work on metalloenzymes, or pure biochemical, biological, or biomedical studies on inorganic compounds are only encouraged if they clearly relate to specific properties of the metals or metalloid elements involved, and significantly further our understanding of inorganic chemistry.
The same applies to papers related to the sensing and visualization of biorelevant metal ions. Such work is expected to have its focus on inorganic aspects and must completely characterize the inorganic compounds involved.
Theoretical and computational studies
We welcome studies that report new models of reactivity, selectivity, bonding or structure, or new computational methods, that have relevance for the design of subsequent experiments.
This is most clearly demonstrated by the description of testable predictions derived from the results of the reported theoretical work; the tests of these predictions could be contained in the same paper in which the predictions are described. Computational research that merely reproduces experimental data is not normally suitable for Dalton Transactions.
Analytical/separation studies and sensor development
Analytical studies on inorganic species are encouraged provided there is significant insight into the chemistry of the inorganic component. Speciation and separation studies that are primarily based around kinetic and thermodynamic models are not considered suitable for Dalton Transactions. Organic sensors in which the primary insight is the synthesis or behaviour of the sensor, rather than an inorganic chemistry advance, will not normally be considered.
Dalton Transactions expects complete characterization of all new compounds/materials by state of the art methods, and that the purity of any compound or material used or reported must be adequately demonstrated (please refer to our Journal Specific Guidelines below for detailed information).
Meet the team
Find out who is on the editorial and advisory boards for the Dalton Transactions journal.
Chair
Russell Morris, University of St Andrews, UK
Associate editors
Paola Ceroni, University of Bologna, Italy
Vadapalli Chandrasekhar, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research Hyderabad, India
Maarit Karppinen, Aalto University, Finland
Mi Hee Lim, KAIST, South Korea
Neal Mankad, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA
Eric Rivard, University of Alberta, Canada
Wolfgang Tremel, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität, Germany
Takashi Uemura, University of Tokyo, Japan
Li-Min Zheng, Nanjing University, China
Editorial board members
Jaqueline L. Kiplinger, Los Alamos National Laboratory USA
Sascha Ott, Uppsala University, Sweden
Simon Aldridge, Oxford University, UK
Santiago Alvarez, Universitat de Barcelona, Spain
John Arnold, University of California, Berkeley, USA
Mu-Hyun Baik, KAIST, Korea
Jitendra Bera, IIT Kanpur, India
Claudia Bizzarri, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany
Eszter Borbas, Uppsala University, Sweden
Holger Braunschweig, University of Wuerzburg, Germany
Xian-He Bu, Nankai University, China
Raffaella Buonsanti, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland
Claire Carmalt, University College London, UK
Eric Clot, University of Montpellier, France
Catherine Constable-Housecroft, University of Basel, Switzerland
Ömer Dag, Bilkent University, Turkey
Amitava Das, Indian Institute of Science and Education Research Kolkata, India
Jillian Dempsey, University of North Carolina, USA
Anjana Devi, Ruhr-University Bochum, Germany
Rasika Dias, The University of Texas at Arlington, USA
Roman Dobrovetsky, Tel Aviv University, Israel
Jairton Dupont, UFRGS, Brazil
William Evans, University of California, USA
Harry B Gray, California Institute of Technology, USA
Zijian Guo, Nanjing University, China
Michael Hayward, University of Oxford, UK
Todd W Hudnall, Texas State University, USA
Ilich Ibarra, National Autonomous University of Mexico, Mexico
Cameron Jones, Monash University, Australia
Masako Kato, Kwansei Gakuin University, Japan
Takahiko Kojima, University of Tsukuba, Japan
Jian-Ping Lang, Suzhou University, China
Jennifer Love, University of British Columbia, Canada
Stuart Macgregor, University of St Andrews, UK
Celia Machado Ronconi, Federal Fluminense University, Brazil
Ahmed Mansour, Cairo University, Egypt
Laurent Maron, Universite Paul Sabatier, France
E Matson, Rochester University, USA
Marinella Mazzanti, EPFL, Switzerland
Nils Metzler-Nolte, Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Germany
Barbara Milani, University of Trieste, Italy
Georgii Nikonov, Brock University, Canada
Seiji Ogo, Kyushu University, Japan
Gerard Parkin, Columbia University, USA
Warren Piers, University of Calgary, Canada
Douglas Stephan, University of Toronto, Canada
Tim Storr, Simon Fraser University, Canada
Matthias Tamm, Technische Universität Braunschweig, Germany
Jinkui Tang, Changchun Institute of Applied Chemistry, China
Thomas Teets, University of Houston, USA
Christine Thomas, The Ohio State University, USA
Ajay Venugopal, Indian Institute of Science Education and Research Thiruvananthapuram, India
Claudio N Verani, Wayne State University, USA
Wai-Yeung Wong, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, China
Zhiguo Xia, South China University of Technology, China
Zuowei Xie, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, China
Lin Xu, East China Normal University, China
Sally Howells-Wyllie, Executive Editor
Mike Andrews, Deputy Editor, ORCID
Michelle Canning, Development Editor
Emily Cuffin-Munday, Development Editor
Lilybelle Wyatt, Editorial Manager
Gaia De Angelis, Publishing Editor
Debora Giovanelli, Publishing Editor
Helen Lunn, Publishing Editor
Samuel Oldknow, Publishing Editor
Daphne Houston, Editorial Assistant
Huw Hedges, Publishing Assistant
Sam Keltie, Publisher, ORCID
Transparent peer review
As part of our commitment to transparency and open science, Dalton Transactions is now offering authors the option of transparent peer review, where the editor’s decision letter, reviewers’ comments and authors’ response for all versions of the manuscript will be published alongside the article under an .
Reviewers will remain anonymous unless they choose to sign their report.
Open access publishing options
Dalton Transactions is a hybrid (transformative) journal and gives authors the choice of publishing their research either via the traditional subscription-based model or instead by choosing our gold open access option. Find out more about our Transformative Journals. which are Plan S compliant.
Gold open access
For authors who want to publish their article gold open access, Dalton Transactions charges an article processing charge (APC) of £3,000 (+ any applicable tax). Our APC is all-inclusive and makes your article freely available online immediately, permanently, and includes your choice of Creative Commons licence (CC BY or CC BY-NC) at no extra cost. It is not a submission charge, so you only pay if your article is accepted for publication.
Learn more about publishing open access.
Read & Publish
If your institution has a Read & Publish agreement in place with the Â鶹AV, APCs for gold open access publishing in Dalton Transactions may already be covered.
Use our to check if your institution has an open access agreement with us.
Please use your official institutional email address to submit your manuscript and check you are assigned as the corresponding author; this helps us to identify if you are eligible for Read & Publish or other APC discounts.
Traditional subscription model
Authors can also publish in Dalton Transactions via the traditional subscription model without needing to pay an APC. Articles published via this route are available to institutions and individuals who subscribe to the journal. Our standard licence allows you to make the accepted manuscript of your article freely available after a 12-month embargo period. This is known as the green route to open access.
Readership information
All researchers working in inorganic and organometallic chemistry, including biological inorganic chemistry.
Subscription information
Dalton Transactions is part of Â鶹AV Gold and Core Chemistry subscription packages.
Online only 2025: ISSN 1477-9234 £4,687 / $8,415
*2023 Journal Citation Reports (Clarivate Analytics, 2024)
**The median time from submission to first decision including manuscripts rejected without peer review from the previous calendar year
***The median time from submission to first decision for peer-reviewed manuscripts from the previous calendar year
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