Journal of Materials Chemistry A Impact Factor
Journal of Materials Chemistry A IF 9.5 in 2024. Q1, rank 63/460. 25-30% acceptance. What it means for your submission.
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Quick answer
Journal of Materials Chemistry A has a 2026 impact factor of 9.5, a five-year JIF of 10.3, sits in Q1, and ranks 63/460 in Materials Science, Multidisciplinary. Published by the Royal Society of Chemistry, JMCA is the RSC's primary venue for energy-relevant and functional materials research.
Metric snapshot
This page uses official JCR 2024 data, the latest impact factor information available in 2026.
If you're comparing JMCA with Advanced Energy Materials or ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces, the JIF places them clearly. JMCA sits between the flagship energy materials journals and the broader applied materials tier, making it one of the strongest mid-to-upper-tier materials venues.
JMCA Impact Factor at a Glance
Metric | Value |
|---|---|
Impact Factor | 9.5 |
5-Year JIF | 10.3 |
Quartile | Q1 |
Category Rank | 63/460 |
What 9.5 Actually Tells You
The 9.5 JIF places JMCA firmly in Q1 for Materials Science. In a category of 460 journals, ranking 63rd is a strong position. The five-year JIF (10.3) running above the two-year number shows that JMCA papers continue to accumulate citations beyond the initial window, which is a good sign for papers with lasting relevance.
JMCA publishes about 2,750 citable items per year. That's high volume, but the journal manages to maintain a respectable JIF despite that output. The editorial model is established: JMCA functions as the RSC's premier materials journal for energy, sustainability, and functional applications.
One key context: JMCA was created in 2013 when the RSC split the original Journal of Materials Chemistry into three journals (A, B, and C) focused on energy, biological, and optical/electronic applications respectively. JMCA inherited the energy and sustainability focus and has built the strongest citation profile of the three.
What This Number Does Not Tell You
- whether the energy-materials angle is strong enough for JMCA's editorial focus
- how JMCA compares to ACS journals in your specific materials community
- how long peer review will take at the RSC
- whether the materials chemistry is novel enough for this editorial bar
- how your specific paper will perform relative to the journal average
How JMCA Compares
Journal | IF (2024) | What it usually rewards |
|---|---|---|
Journal of Materials Chemistry A | 9.5 | Energy-relevant materials with RSC branding |
Advanced Energy Materials | 26.0 | Flagship energy materials |
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 8.2 | Broader applied materials (ACS) |
Advanced Functional Materials | 19.0 | Function-driven materials |
Journal of Power Sources | 7.9 | Battery and electrochemical power |
JMCA sits above ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces and Journal of Power Sources, but well below Advanced Energy Materials and Advanced Functional Materials. It occupies a sweet spot: selective enough to carry real Q1 weight, but realistic enough that strong energy-materials papers have a genuine path to acceptance.
What Editors Are Really Screening For
JMCA editors want materials chemistry with a clear energy or sustainability application. The journal's strongest areas include:
- catalytic materials for energy conversion
- solar cell and photovoltaic materials
- battery materials and electrode chemistry
- membrane and separation materials
- hydrogen production and storage materials
The editorial filter screens for papers where the materials chemistry is the central contribution, with the energy or sustainability application providing context and motivation. Papers that are primarily device engineering without new materials insight tend to be redirected to more applications-focused journals. Similarly, papers that are fundamental materials chemistry without an energy connection are better suited to Chemistry of Materials or JACS.
The RSC vs. ACS Decision
For many materials chemists, the practical choice is between JMCA (RSC) and ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces (ACS). The JIF favors JMCA (9.5 vs. 8.2), but other factors matter:
JMCA is more energy-focused, has a slightly higher JIF, and carries the RSC brand. It's a better fit for papers where energy materials chemistry is the core story.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces is broader in scope, has the ACS brand (stronger in North America), and accommodates a wider range of applications beyond energy. It's often the better choice for applied work that isn't specifically energy-focused.
If your paper sits squarely in energy materials, JMCA is the stronger citation play. If the applications are broader, ACS AMI may give better audience alignment.
Should You Submit to JMCA?
Submit if:
- the paper has clear energy-materials chemistry with novel materials insight
- the work connects materials design to energy or sustainability performance
- you want a strong RSC venue in the Q1 materials tier
- the energy application is central, not just a potential future direction
Think twice if:
- Advanced Energy Materials is a realistic higher-impact target
- the paper is more applied/device engineering than materials chemistry
- ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces would give broader applications readership
- Chemistry of Materials would better serve fundamental materials chemistry
How to Use This Information
Use the JIF with scope awareness. JMCA's 9.5 is a strong number, and the journal delivers reliable Q1 placement for energy-materials work. Pair the metric with the editorial focus test: does your paper's contribution live in the materials chemistry, or in the device or system? JMCA rewards the former.
If you're unsure whether JMCA or another energy-materials venue is the right target, a pre-submission review can help position the manuscript within the materials publishing landscape.
Bottom Line
Journal of Materials Chemistry A has an impact factor of 9.5, with a five-year JIF of 10.3. It's the RSC's flagship energy-materials journal and a strong Q1 venue for work that connects materials chemistry to energy and sustainability applications. The JIF places it above most applied materials competitors and makes it a compelling option for energy-focused materials research.
Impact factor trend and what it means for submission strategy
Journal of Materials Chemistry A at 9.5 is best read as a strong energy-materials chemistry signal, not as a generic materials-science prestige score. The journal sits well below Advanced Energy Materials, but it is also more attainable and more specific about what it wants: chemistry-centered papers where energy or sustainability is not decorative. That is why the number stays useful. It tells you the journal still occupies a meaningful upper-tier position without pretending every good materials paper belongs here.
The decision logic is mostly about whether the chemistry still carries explanatory weight once the device-performance tables are stripped back. JMCA works when the manuscript is really about materials design for energy or sustainability, with mature evidence and believable operating conditions. If the paper is broader and more applications-driven, ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces may be the better audience match. If the work is a true flagship energy-materials story, Advanced Energy Materials may deserve the first attempt. The metric is most useful when it helps the searcher place the paper honestly inside that ladder.
If the manuscript looks like this | Better read of the 9.5 metric |
|---|---|
Energy or sustainability materials paper with real chemistry insight and mature validation | JMCA is a strong Q1 target |
Broader applied materials story with less energy-specific identity | ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces may fit better |
Field-leading energy materials paper with unusually high upside | Advanced Energy Materials may be worth the first pass |
Device benchmarking dominates and the chemistry mostly disappears | The metric is flattering a weak fit |
Use the trend and rank as a calibration tool, not as a substitute for scope judgment. JMCA is strongest when the paper would still sound like an energy-materials chemistry paper even if the journal name were hidden from the reader.
Sources
- Clarivate Journal Citation Reports (latest JCR release used for this page)
- Journal of Materials Chemistry A journal homepage
- Journal of Materials Chemistry A author guidelines
Reference library
Use the core publishing datasets alongside this guide
This article answers one part of the publishing decision. The reference library covers the recurring questions that usually come next: how selective journals are, how long review takes, and what the submission requirements look like across journals.
Dataset / reference guide
Peer Review Timelines by Journal
Reference-grade journal timeline data that authors, labs, and writing centers can cite when discussing realistic review timing.
Dataset / benchmark
Biomedical Journal Acceptance Rates
A field-organized acceptance-rate guide that works as a neutral benchmark when authors are deciding how selective to target.
Reference table
Journal Submission Specs
A high-utility submission table covering word limits, figure caps, reference limits, and formatting expectations.
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