Introduction: This should be a concise statement of the background to the work presented, including relevant earlier work, suitably referenced. The importance of the subject and reasons for the readers’ presumed interest should be indicated.
Material and Method: This section should contain reasonably detailed accounts of materials and experimental procedures, and/or references to previously published methods used. Sufficient information should be provided to enable reproducibility of the work. Descriptions of established procedures are unnecessary but should be referred. Standard techniques and methods used throughout the work should be stated at the beginning of the section. Equipment should be described only if it is non-standard; commercially available instruments are referred to by their model (e.g. Perkin-Elmer 457 or Varian HA-IOO spectrometers). The accuracy of primary measurements should be stated
Unexpected hazards encountered during the experimental work should be noted.
Result: The important results of the work should be clearly stated and illustrated where necessary by tables and figures. The use of flow diagrams and reaction schemes is encouraged. Data must not be reproduced in more than one form, e.g. in both figures and tables, without good reason. Cite tables and figures consecutively in text with Arabic numerals. Do not intersperse tables and figures in text.
Discussion: This should explore the significance of the results of the work, not repeat them, A combined Result and Discussion section may be appropriate. Avoid extensive citations and discussion of published literatures.
Conclusion: This is for interpretation and to highlight the novelty and significance of the work and it should be as brief as possible.