Writing Rules

WRITING RULES
COVER
Title. The first letter of the title of the work should be written in capital letters and the rest in lowercase
letters, centered on the page, and the title should be short and informative, appropriate to the text.
Author names and links. Below the title, clearly indicate each author's first and last name, ORCID
numbers, and postal and email addresses, and make sure all names are spelled correctly. Provide
authors' contact addresses (where the actual work was done) below the names. Indicate all links with
a lowercase superscript letter immediately after the author's name and in front of the appropriate
address. • Corresponding author. Make it clear who will handle peer review and publication at all
stages, as well as post-publication correspondence. Make sure the email address is provided and
contact information is kept up to date by the corresponding author.
Summary
The abstract should briefly state the purpose of the research, main results, and important conclusions.
Non-standard or uncommon abbreviations should be avoided in the abstract, but if necessary they
should be defined when first mentioned in the abstract itself. For Turkish articles, the English
equivalent of the abstract should also be written.
Keywords
Enter up to 6 keywords immediately following the abstract. Keywords should be chosen from words
that describe the subject and should be given in letter order. Each keyword must be separated by a
comma “, “.
English article title: It should be given after the keywords. It must be compatible with the Turkish
Article Title.
Abstract: It should be created by translating the text given in the abstract into English.
Key words: Should be given after the English summary. It must be compatible with Turkish keywords.
ARTICLE TEXT
The works should be prepared to take into account the details given below.
- The article should be created in a single column, as simply as possible, on an A4 page, using 2.5 cm
margins.
- From the line spacing option, the line spacing of the text should be set to 1.5, and single line space
should be left between paragraphs.
- The Turkish text part of the article should be written in Times New Roman 10-point font.
- The article text should not exceed 20 pages.
- The article should be divided into sections with different main headings and each section heading
should be numbered.
Energy Recovery and Transport
Processes
A sample article text is given below.
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results and Discussions
4. Conclusions
5. Symbols
Acknowledgment
References
Appendices
1. Introduction
State the objectives of the research/study and provide adequate background, avoiding a detailed
literature review or a summary of the results.
2. Materials and Methods
If the study conducted is an experimental study, the experimental procedure/method should be
explained clearly. If a theoretical study has been conducted, its theoretical method should be given in
detail. If the method used in the study is a previously published method, the difference between this
study from the other study should be stated by referring to the other study.
3. Results and Discussions
The results obtained should be presented clearly and concisely. The significance of the results should
be explained and discussed. All data obtained should be compared with the literature.
4. Conclusions
The main results of the study should be presented concisely.
5. Symbols
Symbols used in the article should be presented in alphabetical order along with their explanations.
Other symbols used may come in alphabetical order. Subheadings such as “Greek Letters” and
“Subscript” can be used when necessary.
Acknowledgment
It can be given before the references section at the end of the article.
Energy Recovery and Transport
Processes
References
Each source must be cited in the text. All publications cited in the text should be presented in the form
of a list of references following the text of the article. Make references in the text using a number in
square brackets on the line (e.g. "Since Petersen [1] showed ..) and the full reference should be given
in a numerical list at the end of the article.
• References should be formatted and punctuated according to the following examples: journal article
[1]; journal supplement [2]; book [3]; edited book [4], thesis [5]; unpublished report [6]; published
report [7]; processes [8] and patents [9].
• [1] QS Liu, B. Roux, MG Velarde, Thermocapillary convection in two-layer systems, International
Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer 41 (11) (1998) 1499-1511.
[2] ERG Eckert, HH Cho, Transition from sweating to film cooling, International Journal of Heat and
Mass Transfer 37 (supplement 1) (1994) 3-8.
[3] A. Bejan, Convection Heat Transfer, second edition, Wiley, New York, 1995, p. 62-75.
[4] M. Kaviany, Heat transfer in porous media, WM Rohsenow, JP Hartnett, YI Cho (Eds.), Handbook
of Heat Transfer, McGraw-Hill, New York, 1998, p. 9.32-9.43.
[5] W.-T. Yang, Two-phase vortex flow, PhD thesis, University of Illinois, Chicago, IL, 1997.
[6] SP Vanka, Efficient calculation of viscous internal flows, SBIR Phase-I Report, NAS3-25573,
Propulsion Research Associates, Westmont, IL, August 1989.
[7] J. Davids, D. Smith, Analysis of constant velocity joints under high torque, HMSO, London, 1996,
pages 1-8.
[8] VP Carey, Modeling microscale transport in multiphase systems, in J. S. Lee (Ed.), Proceedings of
the Eleventh Heat Transfer Conference, Taylor & Francis, Philadelphia, PA, 1998, p. 23-40.
[9] T. Burns, US Patent No. 358498, 1995.
[10] M. Oguro, S. Imahiro, S. Saito, T. Nakashizuka, Mortality data for Japanese oak wilt disease and
surrounding forest compositions, Mendeley Data, v1, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.17632/ xwj98nb39r.1
• Web references
At a minimum, the full URL and the date the reference was last accessed should be provided. If known,
further information (DOI, author names, dates, reference to a source publication, etc.) should also be
provided.
Additional Information:
Subdivision – numbered sections
Divide your article into clearly defined and numbered sections. Subsections 1.1 (then 1.1.1, 1.1.2, ...),
1.2, etc. It should be numbered as follows (the abstract is not included in the section numbering). Any
subsection can be given a short title. Each heading should appear on its own separate line.
Energy Recovery and Transport
Processes
Equation Numbers: Equations in the text are Eq. 1, Eq. It should be given as 2. Equality numbers
should be numbered in parentheses as (1), (2), (3)...
Units: The SI unit system should be used in text, figures, and tables.
Footnotes: Footnotes should be avoided as much as possible, but if they are absolutely necessary, they
should be written at the bottom of the page where they are used, separated by a line.
Figures and Tables: All images that do not contain tables (photographs, drawings, diagrams, graphs,
maps, etc.) should be named as figures.
- Each figure and table should be numbered according to their occurrence in the text, and all figures
and tables should be given immediately after the relevant paragraph in the text section of the work. It
should be ensured that each of the figures and tables is mentioned in the text. Additionally, links
(hyperlinks) should not be given to figures and tables.
- Figure titles should be placed below the figure, and table titles should be placed above the table.
- Figures (photographs, drawings, diagrams, graphs, maps, etc.) to be added to the article must be in
high resolution (400 dpi or above). Accepted image formats; .jpeg, .png, tiff, .bmp, .eps, wmf, .emf,
or pdf. File sizes should not exceed 1 Mb.