Electrochemical Science & Technology Technical Interest Areas
Fundamental and applied areas of electrochemistry, including experimental and theoretical aspects of electrodes, interfaces, and devices.
The Electrochemical Science & Technology Technical Interest Areas (TIAs) cover energy conversion and energy storage, corrosion, electrodeposition, electrocatalysis, double layer phenomena, sensors, bioelectrochemistry, electrochemical engineering, in situ spectroelectrochemical methods, and electroanalytical chemistry, as they relate to the further understanding of processes of both fundamental and technological importance leading to the rational design and optimization of small and large scale devices.
Specific topics of interest include batteries, low and moderate temperature, and solid oxide fuel cells, electrolyzers, double layer capacitors, corrosion in wet and dry environments, electrodeposition of metals and semiconductors, etching, inorganic and biochemical sensors, reactor design and characterization, biological sensors wet and dry corrosion nanostructures, electrochemical methods for the synthesis of materials such as metal alloys and semiconductors, and for the fabrication of structures of all dimensions.
Journal of The Electrochemical Society Journal of The Electrochemical Society (JES), the ECS flagship, publishes peer-reviewed full papers, review articles, and themed issues across high-impact topics.
ECS Electrochemistry Letters
Newly added to ECS’s list of scholarly journals, the rapid publication and peer-reviewed ECS Electrochemistry Letters (EEL) seeks the submission of concise manuscripts that require speedy publication due to their important technical content and high significance and impact within the field.
Electrochemical and Solid-State Letters Electrochemical and Solid-State Letters (ESL) was the first rapid-publication electronic journal dedicated to covering the leading edge of research and development in the field of solid-state and electrochemical science and technology. ECS ceased publication of ESL in 2012. Preserved now as an archive, ESL has since been replaced by EEL and ECS Solid State Letters.