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SCImago
Q3
WOS
Q3
Impact factor
1.5
SJR
0.346
CiteScore
2.5
Categories
Chemistry (miscellaneous)
Condensed Matter Physics
Materials Science (miscellaneous)
Areas
Chemistry
Materials Science
Physics and Astronomy
Years of issue
1966-2025
journal names
Crystal Research and Technology
CRYST RES TECHNOL
Top-3 citing journals

Crystal Research and Technology
(6379 citations)

Journal of Crystal Growth
(3885 citations)

Journal of Alloys and Compounds
(1188 citations)
Top-3 organizations

Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg
(263 publications)

Humboldt University of Berlin
(198 publications)

Leipzig University
(197 publications)

Sri Sivasubramaniya Nadar College of Engineering
(14 publications)

East China University of Science and Technology
(10 publications)

Istinye University
(10 publications)
Most cited in 5 years
Found
Publications found: 248
Q3

Code-Switching and Achieving Understanding in Court Sessions
Rudneva E., Troshchenkova E.V.
The article analyzes extracts from video recordings of court sessions in Russian, where one of the participants demonstrated misunderstanding. The main method of working with the data is conversion analysis. The focus is on the interaction between specialists (a judge or a lawyer) and non-specialists (a defendant or a victim), namely the functions and mechanisms of code switching from official legal language to everyday colloquial language and vice versa. Such code switches are interpreted as a kind of intralingual translation, which is conceptualized in terms of a) linguistic aspects of simplification of the complex information, b) status-role functions of interaction between participants and conditions of institutional communication, c) differences in the way systems of professional and lay knowledge are organized. Through switching between the official and the colloquial codes during the hearing a specialist can accomplish various actions: find out the true intentions of the interlocutor; monitor the interlocutor’s reaction to his speech, regulating the degree of its formality; check the achieved degree of consistency; encourage the layman interlocutor or reformulate his words using the legal terms. The analysis reveals a number of strategies of varying degrees of complexity and intentionality for restoring understanding, which can be achieved on a technical or on a deeper level.
Q3

A Review of Xenia A. Cherkaev, Gleaning for Communism: The Soviet Socialist Household in Theory and Practice. Ithaca, NY; London: Cornell University Press, 2023, XV+189 pp.
Sokolova A.
The book Gleaning for Communism: The Soviet Socialist Household in Theory and Practice by Xenia A. Cherkaev analyzes the concept of socialist property and its impact on grassroots economic practices. By analyzing how the “Soviet” appears in the narratives of workers and employees of former Soviet enterprises recorded during fieldwork in St Petersburg in the 2010s, Cherkaev offers us an anthropological view of Soviet everyday life through political economy and ethics. According to Cherkaev, the major periods of Soviet history (War Communism, NEP, Stalinism, the Thaw, and Perestroika) can be viewed through the prism of an ethical understanding of socialist property embedded in changing legislation. To understand how Soviet society emerged and how the Soviet state suddenly vanished into thin air, she examines the evolution of these regimes from 1917 to the early 1990s. At the same time, Cherkaev makes an important contribution to the history of ideas and intellectual history as she consistently traces the emergence, development, transformation, and decline of the concept of “socialist property” (“socialist economy”) from the early post-revolutionary years to the collapse of the Soviet Union. Cherkaev’s work will be an important contribution to scholarship on late-Soviet social and economic history.
Q3

Anthropological Research in Soviet Prisoner-of-War Camps in the 1940s
Druzhinin P.
The article fills an important gap in the history of Russian (Soviet) physical anthropology. Based on previously secret archival papers discovered by the author, the history of anthropological research in prisoner-of-war camps on the territory of the USSR in the 1940s is revealed. Following the example of anthropologists during World War I, Soviet anthropologists, led by Viktor Bunak, initiated and carried out an extensive research program under the auspices of the Presidium of the USSR Academy of Sciences in close cooperation with the NKVD authorities. The published archival materials strictly document the work of the scientists, who in 1943 proposed the idea of this large-scale study, and presented the project to the Deputy Chairman of the Council of People’s Commissars, Andrey Vyshinsky. The immediate permission to conduct the expedition was personally given by Lavrentiy Beria. The project was carried out in 1944–1946 under strict secrecy, which also was extended to the publication of its results. Specific information is provided on the conduct of anthropological research in a number of prisoner-of-war camps, the composition of the expedition, instructions, and methodologies. The article analyzes the reasons why the entire history and results of this project remained classified as secret until the collapse of the USSR. The article is preceded by a review of anthropological research by Russian (Soviet) scientists involving special contingents as informants, explaining why special contingents (army conscripts, military personnel, mentally ill individuals, prisoners in prisons and camps) were actively used in anthropological research.
Q3

The Arkhangelsk Village of Lyavlya as a Place of Violence: Between History and Myth
Drannikova N.
The article examines the narratives, ideas and cultural practices that exist in the Arkhangelsk cultural space and represent to an external observer the pages of the Soviet history of the village of Lyavlya associated with the mass extermination of people in the 1920s–1950s. The cultural memory of Lyavlya as a place of violence was created by parishioners of the Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary and the leadership of the Arkhangelsk diocese. The result of their activities was the formation of a narrative about the history of Lyavlya and the particularization of the memory of the victims of violence. For memory actors, the fate of modern Russia is inseparable from the fate of the Orthodox Church, and the people who died in Lyavlya appear as martyrs for the faith and “heroes of the spirit”. Processions of the cross to burial sites provide an opportunity for their participants to legitimize ideas about the special role of Russia in the Orthodox world and the exclusivity of the Russian people. The fate of the dead clergy and laity, according to memorial actors, serves as evidence of the uniqueness of the Russian nation and its special mission to preserve Orthodoxy. Recently, interest in the topic of the traumatic past has faded. The author shows how the memory of traumatic legacies is constructed through ceremonies, memorials and publications.
Q3

A Review of Marina Balina, Sergei Oushakine (eds.), The Pedagogy of Images: Depicting Communism for Children. Toronto; Buffalo, NY; London: University of Toronto Press, 2021, XX+548 pp.
Boitsova O.
The reviewed book The Pedagogy of Images: Depicting Communism for Children, edited by Marina Balina and Sergei Oushakine, is dedicated to Soviet children’s book illustrations of the 1920s–1930s, which had an ideological function. The introduction and sixteen chapters written by different authors demonstrate a variegated picture in which there is a place for avant-garde artistic experiments, educational projects and discussions about children’s books. Illustrations for books that were not related to politics did not come into the focus of attention of the authors of the collection, but nevertheless the coverage of the material is very wide. Different chapters examine how paper, nature, electricity, vezdekhodnost (goeverywhereness), time, the death of Lenin, the Red Army, the proletariat, and “Americanism” were represented in children’s illustrations. Due to involvement of many researchers, the book presents different approaches and methods of visual analysis borrowed from visual studies, art criticism, and history. Not all the authors are convincing in their analysis, but the publication of this collection is undoubtedly an important event in this field of study, even though illustrations for children of the 1920s and 1930s are well-studied.
Q3

Pismo is temnoty [Letter from the Darkness]: A Review of Sergei Kan, Lev Shternberg: etnolog, narodnik, borets za prava evreev [Lev Shternberg: Anthropologist, Russian Socialist, Jewish Activist], transl. from English by A. Glebovskaya. St Petersburg; Boston: Bibliorossika; Academic Studies Press, 2023, 694 pp. (Contemporary Jewish Studies)
Arzyutov D.
The present review of the Russian translation of Sergei Kan’s book Lev Shternberg: Anthropologist, Russian Socialist, Jewish Activist constitutes a literary experiment. It endeavors to engage in a dialogue, presented in the form of a letter, with the central figure of the book, Lev Shternberg, the co-founder of Soviet and Russian anthropology, regarding the significant transformations it has undergone throughout the 20th century and the first two decades of the 21st. The author pays close attention to the social and political contexts of these changes and how they affected the interpretations of Shternberg’s persona and ideas in Soviet times and today. This experiment extends the author’s reflections on the necessity of revisiting the history of anthropology and reintegrating it into the field itself. As American anthropologist Alfred Irving Hallowell suggested in the 1960s, we should conceptualize “the history of anthropology as an anthropological problem.” By this, the author intends to reconstruct a dialogue between the history of anthropology and the communities with whom anthropologists have engaged, as well as to foster connections between the history of anthropological ideas and ongoing discussions both within and beyond the discipline. These changes, as the author argues, have the potential to significantly expand the styles of anthropological writing and reveal new genealogies of anthropological knowledge.
Q3

Proceedings of the World Council of Anthropological Associations Delegates Online Meeting
Q3
Antropologicheskij Forum
,
2024
,
citations by CoLab: 0

Q3

Justice for Children and Adolescents: Critical Theory and Anti-Ageist VK Web Communities
Prus I.
This article discusses the production of a critical anti-ageism project. In this case ‘anti-ageism’ is an emic name for a small-scale web community of several readerships and groups that emerged in 2012 in VK social media. Its participants aim to stand against ageism, meaning discrimination against children and adolescents based on their age. Anti-ageists identify themselves as innovators who produce new ways of imagining children’s roles and challenging the social order. In 2015 their rhetorical strategies changed from producing evidence about personal trauma to formulating texts in the technique of critical social theory. The last ones include condemning ageism as a total system, and various situations and social relations as oppression, exploitation, or domination of children and adolescents, whatever the forms in which they occur. With oppression as a key strategically deployed rhetorical trope the discourse of anti-ageist VK web communities invites comparison with the tendencies of the academic and activist critique of dominant and repressive categorical apparatus. At the same time, the anti-ageists redefine the collective understanding of justice by proposing new visions of children’s agency and scenarios of children’s behaviour. The mechanisms of transfer of interpretive techniques of critical theory, especially the choice of cultural allies of anti-ageism, are presented from the perspective of digital ethnography and placed in the context of sociopolitical changes with attention to the material or technological landscapes and the modes of sociality of specific web fragments. The second part of the article demonstrates how anti-ageism is not only articulated on the internet but also embodied in the social imagination of participants in anti-ageist web communities. Transferring the oppression of children and adolescents from a textual motif into a technique that anti-ageists use in imagining and representing themselves and others opens up the prospect for a discussion about the place of critical theory in the scenes of everyday life.
Q3

The Clashing Rocks: The Survey of the Data and the Dating of the Idea
Berezkin Y.
Vladimir Propp interpreted the fairytale with all its episodes and images as a narrative correspondence to the initiation rites described in Africa, Australia, Melanesia and South America. For him, the motif of clashing rocks was the equivalent of monstrous jaws swallowing adolescent boys. For the authors of the Encyclopedia of Fairy Tales, this motif is a borderline inside the universal opposition between life and death, ours and others. Here we present the systematized data on the world distribution of the narratives that describe dangerous objects which, while remaining in the same place, constantly or occasionally produce rocking, swinging, spinning or other movements. The absence of such an image in Africa (outside the Maghreb) is an argument in favor of its emergence not in the African homeland but after the peopling of Eurasia, possibly in the Central Asian — Southern Siberian region. The most numerous and different versions are recorded in North America. In the Old World, many cases are known from the circumpontic region. In Australia and Melanesia, the motif is known but its versions there are rare. Its spread before the beginning of the peopling of America is beyond doubt. There is no correlation between the “clashing rocks” motif and forms of social organization or economy. Inside particular areas, the variants of the motifs easily replace each other. Most often, the motif is either an obstacle on the border of the supernatural world or a weapon controlled by a demonic person.
Q3

A Review of James Ferguson, Presence and Social Obligation: An Essay of Share. Chicago, IL: Prickly Paradigm Press, 2021, 85 pp.
Zakharova A.
Developing an idea of his previous book Give a Man a Fish (2015), the new publication by James Ferguson deepens the theoretical basis for such a distributive policy as universal basic income. The author considers it necessary to review the prevailing grounds for the distribution of resources, namely labor and citizenship. Referring to materials from southern Africa and scholarly works about huntergatherer societies, Ferguson introduces yet another ground for distribution — presence. A rather open-ended “Being here, among us” in a literal sense of the word can be enough to guarantee the rightful share. Providing anthropological arguments Ferguson not only explains the necessity and possibility of a new global distributive policy, but also declares that the analytical potential of the presence concept should be developed. In the review this approach is associated with the theory from the south by John and Jean Comaroff. Besides, from the reviewer’s point of view, in Presence and Social Obligation Ferguson creates one possible theoretical ground for anarchism. Therefore it is noted that the book under review could be a starting point for rethinking the place and the role of anthropology in political projects.
Q3

Beyond “Rabota” and “Otdykh”: Indeterminacy in the Wild Berry Industry in Karelia
Petryakov S.
How do contemporary Russian workers, caught up in the mechanisms of the seasonal labor market, conceptualize work and leisure? Fieldwork among seasonal berry pickers in Karelia shows how commercial picking, through which some Russians make a living, escapes from the field of definitions available to them: “rabota” as employment and “otdykh” as time free from employment. The article attempts to find out what causes such classificational indeterminacy. The author shows how these causes are not only to be found in the specific organization of seasonal labor relations, but also the opposition of commercial picking to “rabota” and “otdykh” on the basis of the hierarchy of experiences of labor relations from the past and present. In such a case, the definition of “rabota” and “otdykh” is almost always defined through images of wage labor. Such images are linked in this article to what might be called a mode of perception of the mode of production. The author concludes that the dichotomy of “rabota” and “otdykh” becomes an instrument of vernacular critique through which workers navigate the labor market.
Q3

A Review of Sergei Kan, Lev Shternberg: etnolog, narodnik, borets za prava evreev [Lev Shternberg: Anthropologist, Russian Socialist, Jewish Activist], transl. from English by A. Glebovskaya. St Petersburg; Boston: Bibliorossika; Academic Studies Press, 2023, 694 pp. (Contemporary Jewish Studies)
Kuznetsov I.
This book written by Sergei Kan is dedicated to Lev Shternberg (1961–1927), who was a major Russian ethnographer and public figure, one of the founders of the so-called Leningrad school. The Russian translation of the book is reviewed. The large-scale study, rich in archival sources from all possible collections (American Philosophical Society, American Museum of Natural History, the Kunstkammer, RAS Archives, etc.), has been written in the best traditions of the prominent historian George Stocking’s approach. The reviewer notes several undoubted merits of Kan’s work. The main one is an attempt to place the Russian scholar’s research in the context of the Western anthropology of his time. One of the most profound ideas of the book concerns the assessment of Morgan’s influence on Sternberg’s work, and, in a broader perspective, on the development of the social sciences in Russia and the USSR, where, according to the author, social evolutionism played a much more progressive role than in Europe or the USA. That theory served rather to confirm the necessity of social reform, and neither then nor later was it associated with the reaction in the natural sciences, Eurocentrism, and white racism that Boas saw in it. At the same time, the edition under review contains a few inaccuracies and factual errors, some of which were already present in the original edition, while others have arisen due to a not entirely accurate translation.
Q3

Ben Eklof (1946–2023)
Q3
Antropologicheskij Forum
,
2024
,
citations by CoLab: 0

Q3

On Leviathan’s Tail: Anthropological Studies of Bureaucracy and Bureaucrats
Zakharova A., Martynenko A.
This article precedes a selection of papers written as a result of the seminar on the anthropology of bureaucracy in modern Russia. The text offers a brief overview of the development of research into bureaucracy, where studies are mainly made in a polemic with Max Weber’s model of the “ideal” bureaucracy. It considers the most significant works that preceded the emergence of an interest in bureaucracy on the part of social scientists, written in the fields of political science and sociology and united by the method of participant observation. The authors pay attention to the difficulties in distinguishing the anthropology of bureaucracy as an independent field, which, on the one hand, is integrated into political anthropology and on the other hand, tends towards the social studies of professions. The article suggests understanding the anthropology of bureaucracy primarily as a certain viewpoint focusing on how management is implemented and how the “state” is reproduced and felt within bureaucratic institutions. The authors distinguish several popular areas in the field of social research into bureaucracy: critical works analyzing primarily the structural violence of bureaucrats against citizens through client classifications, bureaucratic arbitrariness, etc.; works that focus on the moral and affective aspect of bureaucracy, including the moral dilemmas of employees and their feelings; works devoted to the material world of bureaucracy, where documents become important participants in social interaction; research on the experience of interaction with bureaucracy as a client. In addition, the article provides an overview of existing studies (mainly) of the street-level Russian bureaucracy, performed using anthropological methods within the boundaries of different disciplines.
Q3

Universal Rules and Discretionary Situations: How Do Street-Level Bureaucrats Calculate Suffering
Mishakov N.
Needs assessment (oсenka nuzhdaemosti) is a legal procedure in the Russian welfare system to determine whether citizens qualify for social benefits and, if so, to what extent. The article examines one of the Russian state agencies conducting this procedure. Public officials of the agency examined are typical “street-level bureaucrats” according to Michael Lipsky’s definition. They interact with citizens face to face and determine in what form certain services will be provided by the state and whether they will be provided at all. The creation of the agency has meant a redistribution of power in the social sphere in the region, a fragmentation of the process of prescribing and delivering social care and, at least formally, a stricter separation between the decision-making process and the work carried out according to it. The article analyses how, in the face of this fragmentation, as well as the introduction of new tools for automating decision-making, the space of discretion — the ability at a local level to influence and, in some cases, determine the way work is carried out — is preserved. The research was carried out using qualitative methods, predominantly through interviews. In addition, documents were analyzed and observation was conducted. The author demonstrates how the emerging “gaps” in the social sphere are overcome and the professional and ethical categories of the bureaucrats determine the implementation of the needs assessment process, in particular the evaluation procedures.
Top-100
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|
|
Ceramic Society of Japan
36 citations, 0.05%
|
|
Mineralogical Society
36 citations, 0.05%
|
|
ASM International
34 citations, 0.05%
|
|
Iron and Steel Institute of Japan
34 citations, 0.05%
|
|
Nonferrous Metals Society of China
32 citations, 0.04%
|
|
Higher Education Press
31 citations, 0.04%
|
|
Optical Society of India
31 citations, 0.04%
|
|
Emerald
30 citations, 0.04%
|
|
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
30 citations, 0.04%
|
|
29 citations, 0.04%
|
|
Korean Institute of Metals and Materials
29 citations, 0.04%
|
|
American Geophysical Union
29 citations, 0.04%
|
|
Autonomous Non-profit Organization Editorial Board of the journal Uspekhi Khimii
28 citations, 0.04%
|
|
IntechOpen
27 citations, 0.04%
|
|
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)
26 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Beilstein-Institut
26 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Science Alert
25 citations, 0.03%
|
|
The Russian Academy of Sciences
25 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Society of Chemical Engineers, Japan
24 citations, 0.03%
|
|
24 citations, 0.03%
|
|
23 citations, 0.03%
|
|
ASME International
22 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Thomas Telford
22 citations, 0.03%
|
|
21 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Tsinghua University Press
20 citations, 0.03%
|
|
IWA Publishing
19 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Wuhan University of Technology
19 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Oriental Scientific Publishing Company
19 citations, 0.03%
|
|
IGI Global
19 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Japan Society for Analytical Chemistry
18 citations, 0.02%
|
|
Institute of Physics, Polish Academy of Sciences
18 citations, 0.02%
|
|
Mary Ann Liebert
17 citations, 0.02%
|
|
Copernicus
17 citations, 0.02%
|
|
The Korean Institute of Electrical and Electronic Material Engineers
16 citations, 0.02%
|
|
Samara State Technical University
16 citations, 0.02%
|
|
Taiwan Institute of Chemical Engineers
16 citations, 0.02%
|
|
Annual Reviews
16 citations, 0.02%
|
|
National University of Science & Technology (MISiS)
16 citations, 0.02%
|
|
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
15 citations, 0.02%
|
|
Asian Journal of Chemistry
15 citations, 0.02%
|
|
University of Science and Technology Beijing
14 citations, 0.02%
|
|
Japan Association of Mineralogical Sciences
14 citations, 0.02%
|
|
American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE)
14 citations, 0.02%
|
|
Shanghai Institute of Ceramics
14 citations, 0.02%
|
|
American Scientific Publishers
12 citations, 0.02%
|
|
12 citations, 0.02%
|
|
Social Science Electronic Publishing
12 citations, 0.02%
|
|
Scientific Publishers
11 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Korean Ceramic Society
11 citations, 0.01%
|
|
11 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Hans Publishers
11 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Research Square Platform LLC
11 citations, 0.01%
|
|
9 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Institute of Molecular Biology and Genetics (NAS Ukraine)
9 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Chinese Ceramic Society
9 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Show all (70 more) | |
5000
10000
15000
20000
25000
30000
|
Publishing organizations
50
100
150
200
250
300
|
|
Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg
263 publications, 2.33%
|
|
Humboldt University of Berlin
198 publications, 1.75%
|
|
Leipzig University
197 publications, 1.74%
|
|
Technische Universität Dresden
149 publications, 1.32%
|
|
Shandong University
142 publications, 1.26%
|
|
Anna University
127 publications, 1.12%
|
|
Osmania University
121 publications, 1.07%
|
|
Sardar Patel University
113 publications, 1%
|
|
Friedrich Schiller University Jena
108 publications, 0.96%
|
|
University of Madras
99 publications, 0.88%
|
|
Scientific and Practical Center for Materials Science of the National Academy of Sciences of Belarus
91 publications, 0.81%
|
|
Banaras Hindu University
75 publications, 0.66%
|
|
Shubnikov Institute of Crystallography
71 publications, 0.63%
|
|
Institute of Physics of the Czech Academy of Sciences
65 publications, 0.58%
|
|
University of Cologne
61 publications, 0.54%
|
|
Harbin Institute of Technology
59 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Tohoku University
58 publications, 0.51%
|
|
Lodz University of Technology
58 publications, 0.51%
|
|
Middle East Technical University
54 publications, 0.48%
|
|
University of Jammu
54 publications, 0.48%
|
|
Madurai Kamaraj University
53 publications, 0.47%
|
|
Albert Ludwig University of Freiburg
53 publications, 0.47%
|
|
Ioffe Physical-Technical Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences
52 publications, 0.46%
|
|
Shanghai Institute of Ceramics, Chinese Academy of Sciences
51 publications, 0.45%
|
|
Leibniz Institute for Crystal Growth
49 publications, 0.43%
|
|
Bharathiar University
43 publications, 0.38%
|
|
University of Science and Technology of China
43 publications, 0.38%
|
|
Jagiellonian University
42 publications, 0.37%
|
|
Institute of Semiconductor Physics of the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences
41 publications, 0.36%
|
|
Sichuan University
40 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda
40 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Fujian Institute of Research on the Structure of Matter, Chinese Academy of Sciences
40 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Saurashtra University
38 publications, 0.34%
|
|
Warsaw University of Technology
36 publications, 0.32%
|
|
Loyola College
35 publications, 0.31%
|
|
Freiberg University of Mining and Technology
35 publications, 0.31%
|
|
Osipyan Institute of Solid State Physics of the Russian Academy of Sciences
34 publications, 0.3%
|
|
Lomonosov Moscow State University
32 publications, 0.28%
|
|
Sri Sivasubramaniya Nadar College of Engineering
32 publications, 0.28%
|
|
University of Parma
31 publications, 0.27%
|
|
East China University of Science and Technology
30 publications, 0.27%
|
|
Saint Petersburg State University
28 publications, 0.25%
|
|
Indian Institute of Science
28 publications, 0.25%
|
|
Jiangsu University
28 publications, 0.25%
|
|
Wrocław University of Science and Technology
28 publications, 0.25%
|
|
Free University of Berlin
27 publications, 0.24%
|
|
Kakatiya University
27 publications, 0.24%
|
|
Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań
27 publications, 0.24%
|
|
University of Chinese Academy of Sciences
26 publications, 0.23%
|
|
Tianjin University
26 publications, 0.23%
|
|
University of Salford
26 publications, 0.23%
|
|
University of Rostock
25 publications, 0.22%
|
|
Bharathidasan University
24 publications, 0.21%
|
|
National Physical Laboratory of India
24 publications, 0.21%
|
|
Fritz Haber Institute of the Max Planck Society
24 publications, 0.21%
|
|
Innovations for High Performance Microelectronics (Leibniz Institute for High Performance Microelectronics)
24 publications, 0.21%
|
|
Poznań University of Technology
24 publications, 0.21%
|
|
National Institute for Materials Science
23 publications, 0.2%
|
|
Hacettepe University
22 publications, 0.19%
|
|
University of Kerala
22 publications, 0.19%
|
|
Tsinghua University
22 publications, 0.19%
|
|
Northwestern Polytechnical University
22 publications, 0.19%
|
|
Charles University
22 publications, 0.19%
|
|
Assiut University
22 publications, 0.19%
|
|
Huazhong University of Science and Technology
21 publications, 0.19%
|
|
Rhenish Friedrich Wilhelm University of Bonn
21 publications, 0.19%
|
|
École de Technologie Supérieure
21 publications, 0.19%
|
|
University of Science, Malaysia
20 publications, 0.18%
|
|
Federal Institute For Materials Research and Testing
20 publications, 0.18%
|
|
University of Bremen
20 publications, 0.18%
|
|
Military University of Technology
20 publications, 0.18%
|
|
University of Warsaw
20 publications, 0.18%
|
|
Nanjing University
19 publications, 0.17%
|
|
Shanghai University
19 publications, 0.17%
|
|
Eötvös Loránd University (University of Budapest)
19 publications, 0.17%
|
|
Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
19 publications, 0.17%
|
|
Goethe University Frankfurt
19 publications, 0.17%
|
|
Pandit Ravishankar Shukla University
18 publications, 0.16%
|
|
Chongqing University
18 publications, 0.16%
|
|
National University of Science & Technology (MISiS)
17 publications, 0.15%
|
|
Mahatma Gandhi University
17 publications, 0.15%
|
|
Zhejiang University
17 publications, 0.15%
|
|
Sungkyunkwan University
17 publications, 0.15%
|
|
Technical University of Berlin
17 publications, 0.15%
|
|
Kyushu University
17 publications, 0.15%
|
|
Vellore Institute of Technology University
16 publications, 0.14%
|
|
Autonomous University of Madrid
16 publications, 0.14%
|
|
A.A. Baikov Institute of Metallurgy and Materials Science of the Russian Academy of Sciences
15 publications, 0.13%
|
|
Institute for Physical Research National Academy of Sciences of the Republic of Armenia
15 publications, 0.13%
|
|
Ankara University
15 publications, 0.13%
|
|
University of Delhi
15 publications, 0.13%
|
|
Sardar Vallabhbhai National Institute of Technology Surat
15 publications, 0.13%
|
|
Sri Venkateswara University
15 publications, 0.13%
|
|
Mangalore University
15 publications, 0.13%
|
|
China University of Geosciences (Wuhan)
15 publications, 0.13%
|
|
University College London
15 publications, 0.13%
|
|
V.S. Sobolev Institute of Geology and Mineralogy of the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences
14 publications, 0.12%
|
|
Yerevan State University
14 publications, 0.12%
|
|
Alagappa University
14 publications, 0.12%
|
|
Bhabha Atomic Research Centre
14 publications, 0.12%
|
|
Show all (70 more) | |
50
100
150
200
250
300
|
Publishing organizations in 5 years
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
|
|
Sri Sivasubramaniya Nadar College of Engineering
14 publications, 2.42%
|
|
Istinye University
10 publications, 1.73%
|
|
East China University of Science and Technology
10 publications, 1.73%
|
|
Kunming University of Science and Technology
10 publications, 1.73%
|
|
Leibniz Institute for Crystal Growth
9 publications, 1.55%
|
|
Bharathiar University
8 publications, 1.38%
|
|
University of Chinese Academy of Sciences
7 publications, 1.21%
|
|
Shanghai Institute of Ceramics, Chinese Academy of Sciences
7 publications, 1.21%
|
|
Harbin Institute of Technology
6 publications, 1.04%
|
|
Changzhou University
6 publications, 1.04%
|
|
University of Jeddah
5 publications, 0.86%
|
|
Hebei University of Science and Technology
5 publications, 0.86%
|
|
Shandong University
5 publications, 0.86%
|
|
Anna University
4 publications, 0.69%
|
|
Lovely Professional University
4 publications, 0.69%
|
|
Bharathidasan University
4 publications, 0.69%
|
|
Northwestern Polytechnical University
4 publications, 0.69%
|
|
University of Lorraine
4 publications, 0.69%
|
|
Tianjin University
4 publications, 0.69%
|
|
North University of China
4 publications, 0.69%
|
|
Shanghai Institute of Technology
4 publications, 0.69%
|
|
Shanghai University
4 publications, 0.69%
|
|
Soochow University (Suzhou)
4 publications, 0.69%
|
|
Shenyang University of Chemical Technology
4 publications, 0.69%
|
|
Ningbo University
4 publications, 0.69%
|
|
Xiangtan University
4 publications, 0.69%
|
|
University of Science and Technology of China
4 publications, 0.69%
|
|
Guangxi University
4 publications, 0.69%
|
|
Albert Ludwig University of Freiburg
4 publications, 0.69%
|
|
Freiberg University of Mining and Technology
4 publications, 0.69%
|
|
Kyushu University
4 publications, 0.69%
|
|
Lomonosov Moscow State University
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Kurchatov Complex of Crystallography and Photonics of NRC «Kurchatov Institute»
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Shubnikov Institute of Crystallography
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
King Saud University
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
King Abdulaziz University
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Indian Institute of Science
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Vellore Institute of Technology University
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Indian Institute of Technology (Banaras Hindu University) Varanasi
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Siksha 'O' Anusandhan
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Madurai Kamaraj University
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Beijing Institute of Technology
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Zhejiang University
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Shanghai Jiao Tong University
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Huazhong University of Science and Technology
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Tongji University
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Sichuan University
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Gandhi Institute of Technology and Management
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Dalian University of Technology
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
University of Malaya
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Mangalore University
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Wuhan Institute of Technology
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Wuhan University
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Shandong University of Science and Technology
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Hebei University of Technology
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Dalian Maritime University
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
University of Shanghai for Science and Technology
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Shanghai Dianji University
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Jiamusi University
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Xi'an University of Architecture and Technology
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Shaanxi University of Science and Technology
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
University of Hassan II Casablanca
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
University of Cologne
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
University of Erlangen–Nuremberg
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
University of Hyogo
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Anhui Institute of Optics and Fine Mechanics, Chinese Academy of Sciences
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
University of Sciences and Technology Houari Boumediene
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Ibn Tofaïl University
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
University of Carthage
3 publications, 0.52%
|
|
Kurnakov Institute of General and Inorganic Chemistry of the Russian Academy of Sciences
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
G.A. Krestov Institute of Solution Chemistry of the Russian Academy of Sciences
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Prokhorov General Physics Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
National Research Centre "Kurchatov Institute"
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Mendeleev University of Chemical Technology of Russia
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
King Khalid University
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
King Abdullah University of Science and Technology
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Majmaah University
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Qassim University
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Birla Institute of Technology and Science, Pilani
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Government College University, Faisalabad
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
University of the Punjab
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
National Institute of Technology Agartala
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Guru Nanak Dev University
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Shiv Nadar University
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
University of Petroleum and Energy Studies
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Sathyabama Institute of Science and Technology
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Institute of Chemical Technology, Mumbai
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Tsinghua University
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Fudan University
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Presidency University
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Xi'an Jiaotong University
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Periyar University
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
National University of Malaysia
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Curtin University, Malaysia
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Central South University
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Grenoble Alpes University
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Nanjing Tech University
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Southeast University
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Nankai University
2 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Show all (70 more) | |
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
|
Publishing countries
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
|
|
Germany
|
Germany, 2393, 21.18%
Germany
2393 publications, 21.18%
|
India
|
India, 1400, 12.39%
India
1400 publications, 12.39%
|
China
|
China, 1243, 11%
China
1243 publications, 11%
|
Poland
|
Poland, 670, 5.93%
Poland
670 publications, 5.93%
|
Russia
|
Russia, 604, 5.34%
Russia
604 publications, 5.34%
|
USSR
|
USSR, 565, 5%
USSR
565 publications, 5%
|
Bulgaria
|
Bulgaria, 370, 3.27%
Bulgaria
370 publications, 3.27%
|
Czech Republic
|
Czech Republic, 291, 2.57%
Czech Republic
291 publications, 2.57%
|
Japan
|
Japan, 249, 2.2%
Japan
249 publications, 2.2%
|
Italy
|
Italy, 199, 1.76%
Italy
199 publications, 1.76%
|
Turkey
|
Turkey, 181, 1.6%
Turkey
181 publications, 1.6%
|
USA
|
USA, 172, 1.52%
USA
172 publications, 1.52%
|
United Kingdom
|
United Kingdom, 157, 1.39%
United Kingdom
157 publications, 1.39%
|
Ukraine
|
Ukraine, 148, 1.31%
Ukraine
148 publications, 1.31%
|
France
|
France, 140, 1.24%
France
140 publications, 1.24%
|
Belarus
|
Belarus, 124, 1.1%
Belarus
124 publications, 1.1%
|
Czechoslovakia
|
Czechoslovakia, 122, 1.08%
Czechoslovakia
122 publications, 1.08%
|
Hungary
|
Hungary, 121, 1.07%
Hungary
121 publications, 1.07%
|
Egypt
|
Egypt, 115, 1.02%
Egypt
115 publications, 1.02%
|
Spain
|
Spain, 87, 0.77%
Spain
87 publications, 0.77%
|
Romania
|
Romania, 84, 0.74%
Romania
84 publications, 0.74%
|
Republic of Korea
|
Republic of Korea, 74, 0.65%
Republic of Korea
74 publications, 0.65%
|
Slovakia
|
Slovakia, 51, 0.45%
Slovakia
51 publications, 0.45%
|
Netherlands
|
Netherlands, 44, 0.39%
Netherlands
44 publications, 0.39%
|
Iran
|
Iran, 39, 0.35%
Iran
39 publications, 0.35%
|
Moldova
|
Moldova, 39, 0.35%
Moldova
39 publications, 0.35%
|
Austria
|
Austria, 38, 0.34%
Austria
38 publications, 0.34%
|
Malaysia
|
Malaysia, 37, 0.33%
Malaysia
37 publications, 0.33%
|
Greece
|
Greece, 35, 0.31%
Greece
35 publications, 0.31%
|
Switzerland
|
Switzerland, 34, 0.3%
Switzerland
34 publications, 0.3%
|
Armenia
|
Armenia, 33, 0.29%
Armenia
33 publications, 0.29%
|
Mexico
|
Mexico, 32, 0.28%
Mexico
32 publications, 0.28%
|
Saudi Arabia
|
Saudi Arabia, 32, 0.28%
Saudi Arabia
32 publications, 0.28%
|
Algeria
|
Algeria, 29, 0.26%
Algeria
29 publications, 0.26%
|
Australia
|
Australia, 26, 0.23%
Australia
26 publications, 0.23%
|
Brazil
|
Brazil, 25, 0.22%
Brazil
25 publications, 0.22%
|
Tunisia
|
Tunisia, 24, 0.21%
Tunisia
24 publications, 0.21%
|
Canada
|
Canada, 21, 0.19%
Canada
21 publications, 0.19%
|
Vietnam
|
Vietnam, 19, 0.17%
Vietnam
19 publications, 0.17%
|
Azerbaijan
|
Azerbaijan, 18, 0.16%
Azerbaijan
18 publications, 0.16%
|
Venezuela
|
Venezuela, 18, 0.16%
Venezuela
18 publications, 0.16%
|
Latvia
|
Latvia, 18, 0.16%
Latvia
18 publications, 0.16%
|
Jordan
|
Jordan, 16, 0.14%
Jordan
16 publications, 0.14%
|
Cuba
|
Cuba, 16, 0.14%
Cuba
16 publications, 0.14%
|
Sweden
|
Sweden, 16, 0.14%
Sweden
16 publications, 0.14%
|
Portugal
|
Portugal, 15, 0.13%
Portugal
15 publications, 0.13%
|
Israel
|
Israel, 15, 0.13%
Israel
15 publications, 0.13%
|
Pakistan
|
Pakistan, 15, 0.13%
Pakistan
15 publications, 0.13%
|
Palestine
|
Palestine, 14, 0.12%
Palestine
14 publications, 0.12%
|
Serbia
|
Serbia, 14, 0.12%
Serbia
14 publications, 0.12%
|
Belgium
|
Belgium, 13, 0.12%
Belgium
13 publications, 0.12%
|
Singapore
|
Singapore, 13, 0.12%
Singapore
13 publications, 0.12%
|
Finland
|
Finland, 12, 0.11%
Finland
12 publications, 0.11%
|
South Africa
|
South Africa, 12, 0.11%
South Africa
12 publications, 0.11%
|
Morocco
|
Morocco, 11, 0.1%
Morocco
11 publications, 0.1%
|
Yugoslavia
|
Yugoslavia, 11, 0.1%
Yugoslavia
11 publications, 0.1%
|
Bangladesh
|
Bangladesh, 10, 0.09%
Bangladesh
10 publications, 0.09%
|
Norway
|
Norway, 8, 0.07%
Norway
8 publications, 0.07%
|
UAE
|
UAE, 8, 0.07%
UAE
8 publications, 0.07%
|
Argentina
|
Argentina, 7, 0.06%
Argentina
7 publications, 0.06%
|
Denmark
|
Denmark, 7, 0.06%
Denmark
7 publications, 0.06%
|
Iraq
|
Iraq, 7, 0.06%
Iraq
7 publications, 0.06%
|
Croatia
|
Croatia, 7, 0.06%
Croatia
7 publications, 0.06%
|
Ghana
|
Ghana, 6, 0.05%
Ghana
6 publications, 0.05%
|
Uruguay
|
Uruguay, 6, 0.05%
Uruguay
6 publications, 0.05%
|
Chile
|
Chile, 6, 0.05%
Chile
6 publications, 0.05%
|
Bahrain
|
Bahrain, 5, 0.04%
Bahrain
5 publications, 0.04%
|
Ireland
|
Ireland, 5, 0.04%
Ireland
5 publications, 0.04%
|
Lithuania
|
Lithuania, 5, 0.04%
Lithuania
5 publications, 0.04%
|
Uzbekistan
|
Uzbekistan, 5, 0.04%
Uzbekistan
5 publications, 0.04%
|
Kazakhstan
|
Kazakhstan, 4, 0.04%
Kazakhstan
4 publications, 0.04%
|
Estonia
|
Estonia, 4, 0.04%
Estonia
4 publications, 0.04%
|
Nigeria
|
Nigeria, 4, 0.04%
Nigeria
4 publications, 0.04%
|
Slovenia
|
Slovenia, 4, 0.04%
Slovenia
4 publications, 0.04%
|
Thailand
|
Thailand, 4, 0.04%
Thailand
4 publications, 0.04%
|
Oman
|
Oman, 3, 0.03%
Oman
3 publications, 0.03%
|
Georgia
|
Georgia, 2, 0.02%
Georgia
2 publications, 0.02%
|
Indonesia
|
Indonesia, 2, 0.02%
Indonesia
2 publications, 0.02%
|
Kyrgyzstan
|
Kyrgyzstan, 2, 0.02%
Kyrgyzstan
2 publications, 0.02%
|
Sri Lanka
|
Sri Lanka, 2, 0.02%
Sri Lanka
2 publications, 0.02%
|
Yemen
|
Yemen, 1, 0.01%
Yemen
1 publication, 0.01%
|
Cameroon
|
Cameroon, 1, 0.01%
Cameroon
1 publication, 0.01%
|
Colombia
|
Colombia, 1, 0.01%
Colombia
1 publication, 0.01%
|
Costa Rica
|
Costa Rica, 1, 0.01%
Costa Rica
1 publication, 0.01%
|
Liechtenstein
|
Liechtenstein, 1, 0.01%
Liechtenstein
1 publication, 0.01%
|
Mozambique
|
Mozambique, 1, 0.01%
Mozambique
1 publication, 0.01%
|
Peru
|
Peru, 1, 0.01%
Peru
1 publication, 0.01%
|
Ethiopia
|
Ethiopia, 1, 0.01%
Ethiopia
1 publication, 0.01%
|
Show all (58 more) | |
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
|
Publishing countries in 5 years
50
100
150
200
250
|
|
China
|
China, 231, 39.9%
China
231 publications, 39.9%
|
India
|
India, 109, 18.83%
India
109 publications, 18.83%
|
Germany
|
Germany, 30, 5.18%
Germany
30 publications, 5.18%
|
Japan
|
Japan, 23, 3.97%
Japan
23 publications, 3.97%
|
Saudi Arabia
|
Saudi Arabia, 20, 3.45%
Saudi Arabia
20 publications, 3.45%
|
Turkey
|
Turkey, 20, 3.45%
Turkey
20 publications, 3.45%
|
USA
|
USA, 18, 3.11%
USA
18 publications, 3.11%
|
Russia
|
Russia, 16, 2.76%
Russia
16 publications, 2.76%
|
Algeria
|
Algeria, 11, 1.9%
Algeria
11 publications, 1.9%
|
Palestine
|
Palestine, 11, 1.9%
Palestine
11 publications, 1.9%
|
Malaysia
|
Malaysia, 9, 1.55%
Malaysia
9 publications, 1.55%
|
Pakistan
|
Pakistan, 9, 1.55%
Pakistan
9 publications, 1.55%
|
France
|
France, 8, 1.38%
France
8 publications, 1.38%
|
Morocco
|
Morocco, 6, 1.04%
Morocco
6 publications, 1.04%
|
Republic of Korea
|
Republic of Korea, 6, 1.04%
Republic of Korea
6 publications, 1.04%
|
Tunisia
|
Tunisia, 5, 0.86%
Tunisia
5 publications, 0.86%
|
Czech Republic
|
Czech Republic, 5, 0.86%
Czech Republic
5 publications, 0.86%
|
Bangladesh
|
Bangladesh, 4, 0.69%
Bangladesh
4 publications, 0.69%
|
Iran
|
Iran, 4, 0.69%
Iran
4 publications, 0.69%
|
Spain
|
Spain, 4, 0.69%
Spain
4 publications, 0.69%
|
Ukraine
|
Ukraine, 3, 0.52%
Ukraine
3 publications, 0.52%
|
Australia
|
Australia, 3, 0.52%
Australia
3 publications, 0.52%
|
Austria
|
Austria, 3, 0.52%
Austria
3 publications, 0.52%
|
Brazil
|
Brazil, 3, 0.52%
Brazil
3 publications, 0.52%
|
Vietnam
|
Vietnam, 3, 0.52%
Vietnam
3 publications, 0.52%
|
Italy
|
Italy, 3, 0.52%
Italy
3 publications, 0.52%
|
Mexico
|
Mexico, 3, 0.52%
Mexico
3 publications, 0.52%
|
Poland
|
Poland, 3, 0.52%
Poland
3 publications, 0.52%
|
Argentina
|
Argentina, 2, 0.35%
Argentina
2 publications, 0.35%
|
Bulgaria
|
Bulgaria, 2, 0.35%
Bulgaria
2 publications, 0.35%
|
United Kingdom
|
United Kingdom, 2, 0.35%
United Kingdom
2 publications, 0.35%
|
Hungary
|
Hungary, 2, 0.35%
Hungary
2 publications, 0.35%
|
Egypt
|
Egypt, 2, 0.35%
Egypt
2 publications, 0.35%
|
Israel
|
Israel, 2, 0.35%
Israel
2 publications, 0.35%
|
Nigeria
|
Nigeria, 2, 0.35%
Nigeria
2 publications, 0.35%
|
Belarus
|
Belarus, 1, 0.17%
Belarus
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Portugal
|
Portugal, 1, 0.17%
Portugal
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Bahrain
|
Bahrain, 1, 0.17%
Bahrain
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Belgium
|
Belgium, 1, 0.17%
Belgium
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Denmark
|
Denmark, 1, 0.17%
Denmark
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Indonesia
|
Indonesia, 1, 0.17%
Indonesia
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Jordan
|
Jordan, 1, 0.17%
Jordan
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Ireland
|
Ireland, 1, 0.17%
Ireland
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Cameroon
|
Cameroon, 1, 0.17%
Cameroon
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Canada
|
Canada, 1, 0.17%
Canada
1 publication, 0.17%
|
UAE
|
UAE, 1, 0.17%
UAE
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Oman
|
Oman, 1, 0.17%
Oman
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Singapore
|
Singapore, 1, 0.17%
Singapore
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Thailand
|
Thailand, 1, 0.17%
Thailand
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Finland
|
Finland, 1, 0.17%
Finland
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Sweden
|
Sweden, 1, 0.17%
Sweden
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Ethiopia
|
Ethiopia, 1, 0.17%
Ethiopia
1 publication, 0.17%
|
Show all (22 more) | |
50
100
150
200
250
|
11 profile journal articles
Filatov Stanislav
DSc in Geological and Earth sciences, Professor

Saint Petersburg State University
224 publications,
3 260 citations
h-index: 28
9 profile journal articles
Bubnova Rimma
DSc in Chemistry

I. V. Grebenshchikov Institute of Silicate Chemistry of NRC «Kurchatov Institute»
189 publications,
1 869 citations
h-index: 21
Research interests
Crystal Chemistry
6 profile journal articles
Dabrowski Roman
660 publications,
9 929 citations
h-index: 45
3 profile journal articles
Avetisov Roman
🥼 🤝
PhD in Chemistry, Associate Professor

Mendeleev University of Chemical Technology of Russia
61 publications,
396 citations
h-index: 11
Research interests
High-purity substances
LEDs
Luminescent materials
Mass Spectrometry
2 profile journal articles
Kuznetsov Vladimir
DSc in Chemistry

N.D. Zelinsky Institute of Organic Chemistry of the Russian Academy of Sciences
27 publications,
218 citations
h-index: 8
2 profile journal articles
Millán Ángel
111 publications,
5 273 citations
h-index: 31
2 profile journal articles
Shantarovich Viktor

N.N. Semenov Federal Research Center for Chemical Physics of the Russian Academy of Sciences
151 publications,
3 907 citations
h-index: 30
1 profile journal article
Averyanov Dmitry

National Research Centre "Kurchatov Institute"
69 publications,
903 citations
h-index: 16
1 profile journal article
Kulikov Anton

Shubnikov Institute of Crystallography
41 publications,
294 citations
h-index: 10
1 profile journal article
Asadchikov Victor
DSc in Physics and Mathematics, Professor

Kurchatov Complex of Crystallography and Photonics of NRC «Kurchatov Institute»
165 publications,
875 citations
h-index: 13
1 profile journal article
Kabanova Natalia

Samara State Technical University

Kola Science Center of the Russian Academy of Sciences
32 publications,
593 citations
h-index: 12
1 profile journal article
Vyvenko Oleg
🥼
DSc in Physics and Mathematics, Professor

Saint Petersburg State University
131 publications,
1 609 citations
h-index: 18
Research interests
Electron microscopy
Physics of semiconductors
1 profile journal article
GRANATA VERONICA
142 publications,
7 408 citations
h-index: 34