Editor-in-chief DAMIA Barcelo (National Senior Scientific Investigation Committee), Jay Gump (University of California, Riverside) and Philip Hopke (University of Rochester). According to the journal citation report, the impact factor of the journal in 2020 is 7.963.
Invite original and high-quality interdisciplinary environmental research papers with wide influence to contribute. We will mainly consider research that significantly promotes basic understanding and pays attention to the interconnection of multiple fields. Priority is given to field research, and papers describing laboratory experiments must prove significant progress in methodology or mechanical understanding, and have a clear connection with the environment. Descriptive, repetitive, incremental or regional studies with limited novelty are not considered.
Subject area:
1, a new understanding of air quality, atmospheric conditions and their roles in adverse health or environmental consequences;
2. Atmospheric biogeochemistry;
3. Ecosystem services and life cycle assessment;
4. Eco-toxicology and risk assessment;
5. Eco-hydrology;
6. Wild animals and pollutants;
7. Climate change, agriculture, forestry and land use;
8. Environmental impact The environmental impact of waste or wastewater treatment;
9, drinking water pollutants and their impact on health;
10, environmental remediation of soil and groundwater;
1 1, extreme events and environmental impacts caused by global change;
12, hydrogeochemistry and simulation of groundwater;
13, emerging pollutants such as nanomaterials and microplastics;
14, new pollutants (biological) monitoring and risk assessment method;
15, application of remote sensing and big data in many fields;
16, stress ecology of marine, freshwater and terrestrial ecosystems;
17, trace metals and organic matter in biogeochemical cycle;
Water quality and safety.
Not considered submission type:
1, the paper has not contributed important new knowledge to the research field;
2. Disciplinary research with limited relevance to the environment;
3. Lack of international relevance of local or regional case studies;
4, no environmental impact of soil or plant science research;
5. Laboratory batch experiments without applied components, such as batch adsorption experiments, preparation and evaluation of adsorbents or catalysts to remove pollutants;
6. The manuscript is mainly a data report without substantive assumptions, such as monitoring common pollutants;
7, modeling research, without calibration and data verification;
8. Social science papers on environmental or resource economics, policy and management in Nature;
9. Analyze and test the toxicology and ecotoxicology of a single chemical on a laboratory scale;
10, human health research that does not provide important additional knowledge about the health consequences caused by air pollution;
1 1. Method development paper on common pollutants;
12, the paper is based on bibliometric analysis.