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AN EXAMPLE TO ILLUSTRATE THE DETAILS OF MANUSCRIPT

FORMAT AND PRESENTATION

– THE TITLE IS IN FONT TIMES NEW ROMAN AND SIZE 14

A. Author* & B. Author** C. Author*** in Italic

*Organization, P.O. Box Number,City, Country, Email:

**Organization, P.O. Box Number, City, Country, Email:

***Organization, P.O. Box Number, City, Country, Email:

ABSTRACT: Put an abstract of five to ten lines here

KEYWORDS:example, printing format, heading format, figure format

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NOMENCLATURE

L / The length (m) / Greek symbols
M / The mass (kg) / η / efficiency
N / The number / Subscripts
V / Velocity (m/s) / c / cold

1 PRINTING FORMAT

Use A4-size (210 x 297 mm) papers. In formatting your paper, set top and bottom margins to 27 mm, and left and right margins to 20 mm; the size of printing area is thus 170 x 243 mm. The text of the body of paper should be typed in single-column format in the printing area, as well as in font Times New Roman and size 11. The margins are given in Table 1.

Table 1 margins format

Margin position / Top / Bottom / Left / right
Margin size(mm) / 27 / 27 / 20 / 20

2 HEADING FORMAT

The titles of the main sections shouldbe capital letters in bold. A blank line should be placed above and below the section titles.

2.1 Sub-section headings format

Sub-section headings should be lower-case letters in bold. A blank line should be placed above, but not below, sub-section headings.

Sub-sub-section heading format: Sub-sub-sections should be avoided unless absolutely necessary. If they are used, the sub-sub-section heading should be left justified, in normal underlined lower case letters, with the text starting to the right of the heading.

3 FORMAT OF EQUATIONS AND FIGURES

3.1 Format of equations

It is suggested that any alphabetical letters used as symbols in equations are given in italics font to differentiate them from normal text. Try to use symbols in common use to aid understanding. An example is given in Eq. (1)

/ (1)

3.2 Format of figures

All figures (graphs, line drawings, photographs, etc.) should be numbered consecutively and have a caption consisting of the figure number and a brief title or description of the figure. The caption[1] should be placed underneath the figure with the figure numberin bold. This number should be used when referring to the figure in text. Figures should be referenced within the text as "Fig. 1." When the reference to a figure begins a sentence, the abbreviation "Fig." should be spelled out, e.g., "Figure 1." An example is given in Fig. 1. One or two figures may be placed in the same rows, but more figures or figures and text placed in the same rows are not suggested.

Figure 1 Line drawing and photograph in 200 dpi

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

The section is not compulsory. Grants, other financial aid and special assistance may be recognized in the section.

REFERENCES

[1] Fuller, E.W. and Stoessel, R.F., "Factory Automation," Mech. Eng., Vol.109, No. 3 (1987), pp.42-45.

[2] Richardson, J.V., "Knowledge-Based Systems for General Reference Work: Applications, Problems, and Progress," San Diego, Academic Press, 1995.

[3] Getz, M., "Electronic Publishing in Academia: An Economic Perspective" in "Technology and Scholarly Communication," edited by Richard Ekman and Richard E. Quandt, Berkeley, University of California Press, 1999.

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[1]Footnote: The footnote is in font Times New Roman and size 11.