Template
Template
Template
2.1 Figures
Please check that the lines in line drawings are not interrupted and are of a
constant width. Grids and details within the Figures must be clearly legible and may
not be written one on top of the other. Line drawings should have a resolution of at
least 800 dpi (preferably 1200 dpi). The lettering in Figures should have a height of 2
mm (10-point type). Figures should be numbered and should have a caption which
should always be positioned under the Figures, in contrast to the caption belonging to
a table, which should always appear above the table; this is simply achieved as matter
of sequence in your source.
Please center the Figures or your tabular material by using the \centering
declaration. Short captions are centered by default between the margins and typeset in
9-point type (Fig. 1 shows an example). The distance between text and figure is preset
to be about 8 mm, the distance between Figure and caption about 6 mm. To ensure
that the reproduction of your illustrations is of a reasonable quality, we advise against
the use of shading. The contrast should be as pronounced as possible. If screenshots
are necessary, please make sure that you are happy with the print quality before you
send the les.
qψ
qψ uk+2 α = π/3 uk+1
Tangential flux
component
k+2 Subsector II ψs dψ
k+1
α = π/6
sr
k Subsector I
r
α=0
x 10 8.6
y 15 12.4
z 20 15.3
(a)
(b)
Figure 2. Comparing simulation results in wind turbine performance with the power control
mode to that with the rotor speed control mode in (a) energy output and (b) smoothing function
Remark 1. In the printed volumes, illustrations are generally black and white
(halftones), and only in exceptional cases, and if the author is prepared to cover the
extra cost for color reproduction, are colored pictures accepted. Colored pictures are
welcome in the electronic version free of charge. If you send colored gures that are to
be printed in black and white, please make sure that they really are legible in black
and white. Some colors as well as the contrast of converted colors show up very
poorly when printed in black and white.
2.2 Formulas
Displayed equations or formulas are centered and set on a separate line (with
an extra line or hal ine space above and below). Displayed expressions should be
numbered for reference. The numbers should be consecutive within each section or
within the contribution, with numbers enclosed in parentheses and set on the right
margin { which is the default if you use the equation environment, e.g.,
h (1)
E v −E= ¿)
2. m
Equations should be punctuated in the same way as ordinary text but with a
small space before the end punctuation mark. All symbols that have been used in the
equations should be defined in the following text.
2.3 Footnotes
The superscript numeral used to refer to a footnote appears in the text either
directly after the word to be discussed or { in relation to a phrase or a sentence
{ following the punctuation sign (comma, semicolon, or period). Footnotes should
appear at the bottom of the normal text area, with a line of about 2 cm set immediately
above them.
The footnote numeral is set ush left and the text follows with the usual word spacing.
2.5 Citations
Proper citation of other works should be made to avoid plagiarism. When
referring to a reference item, please use the reference number as in [16] or [17] for
multiple references. The use of ”Ref [18]...” should be employed for any reference
citation at the beginning of sentence. For any reference with more than 3 or more
authors, only the first author is to be written followed by et al. (e.g. in [19]). Examples
of reference items of different categories shown in the References section. Each item
in the references section should be typed using 9 pt font size [20]–[25].
4 Conclusion
Provide a statement that what is expected as stated in the Introduction section,
and obtained in Results and Discussion section. Moreover, it can also be added the
prospect of the development of research results and application prospects of further
studies into the next (based on result and discussion).
[1] Journal/Periodicals
Basic Format:
J. K. Author, “Title of paper,” Abbrev. Title of Journal/Periodical, vol. x, no. x, pp. xxx-xxx, Abbrev.
Month, year, doi: xxx.
Examples:
M. M. Chiampi and L. L. Zilberti, “Induction of electric field in human bodies moving near MRI: An
efficient BEM computational procedure,” IEEE Trans. Biomed. Eng., vol. 58, pp. 2787–2793, Oct.
2011, doi: 10.1109/TBME.2011.2158315.
R. Fardel, M. Nagel, F. Nuesch, T. Lippert, and A. Wokaun, “Fabrication of organic light emitting
diode pixels by laser-assisted forward transfer,” Appl. Phys. Lett., vol. 91, no. 6, Aug. 2007, Art. no.
061103, doi: 10.1063/1.2759475.
[2] Conference Proceedings
Basic Format:
J. K. Author, “Title of paper,” in Abbreviated Name of Conf., (location of conference is optional), year, pp.
xxx–xxx, doi: xxx.
Examples:
G. Veruggio, “The EURON roboethics roadmap,” in Proc. Humanoids ’06: 6th IEEE-RAS Int. Conf.
Humanoid Robots, 2006, pp. 612–617, doi: 10.1109/ICHR.2006.321337.
J. Zhao, G. Sun, G. H. Loh, and Y. Xie, “Energy-efficient GPU design with reconfigurable in-
package graphics memory,” in Proc. ACM/IEEE Int. Symp. Low Power Electron. Design (ISLPED),
Jul. 2012, pp. 403–408, doi: 10.1145/2333660.2333752.
[3] Book
Basic Format:
J. K. Author, “Title of chapter in the book,” in Title of His Published Book, X. Editor, Ed., xth ed. City of
Publisher, State (only U.S.), Country: Abbrev. of Publisher, year, ch. x, sec. x, pp. xxx–xxx.
Examples:
*In the reference list, however, list all the authors for up to six authors. Use et al. only if: 1) The names are
not given and 2) List of authors more than 6. Example: J. D. Bellamy et al., Computer Telephony
Integration, New York: Wiley, 2010.
References
1. Smith, T.F., Waterman, M.S.: Identification of Common Molecular Subsequences. J. Mol.
Biol. 147, 195–197 (1981)
2. May, P., Ehrlich, H.C., Steinke, T.: ZIB Structure Prediction Pipeline: Composing a
Complex Biological Workflow through Web Services. In: Nagel, W.E., Walter, W.V.,
Lehner, W. (eds.) Euro-Par 2006. LNCS, vol. 4128, pp. 1148–1158. Springer, Heidelberg
(2006)
3. Foster, I., Kesselman, C.: The Grid: Blueprint for a New Computing Infrastructure. Morgan
Kaufmann, San Francisco (1999)
4. Czajkowski, K., Fitzgerald, S., Foster, I., Kesselman, C.: Grid Information Services for
Distributed Resource Sharing. In: 10th IEEE International Symposium on High Performance
Distributed Computing, pp. 181–184. IEEE Press, New York (2001)
5. Foster, I., Kesselman, C., Nick, J., Tuecke, S.: The Physiology of the Grid: an Open Grid
Services Architecture for Distributed Systems Integration. Technical report, Global Grid
Forum (2002)
6. National Center for Biotechnology Information, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov