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IEEE Conference Template PDF

This document provides instructions for writing a paper using LaTeX formatting. It discusses the components that should be included in a paper such as the title, text, headings, etc. It provides guidelines on maintaining formatting integrity, preparing the paper, writing equations, using abbreviations and units, and including authors and affiliations. The document is intended to help authors properly format their paper using LaTeX.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
81 views3 pages

IEEE Conference Template PDF

This document provides instructions for writing a paper using LaTeX formatting. It discusses the components that should be included in a paper such as the title, text, headings, etc. It provides guidelines on maintaining formatting integrity, preparing the paper, writing equations, using abbreviations and units, and including authors and affiliations. The document is intended to help authors properly format their paper using LaTeX.

Uploaded by

Resakaa
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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MODELO ELÉCTRICO DE UN HORNO POR

CONDUCCIÓN
* Note: Sub-titles are not captured in Xplore and should not be used

1st Pablo Cardenas B. 2nd Marco Henrı́quez P. 3rd Nicolás Mancilla C.


Ingenierı́a Civil Electrónica Ingenierı́a Civil Electrónica Ingenierı́a Civil Electrónica
Universidad Austral de Chile Universidad Austral de Chile Universidad Austral de Chile
Osorno, Chile Santiago, Chile Calbuco, Chile
[email protected] [email protected] [email protected]

4th Nicolás Ojeda S. 5th Fernando Salamanca V.


Ingenierı́a Civil Electrónica Ingenierı́a Civil Electrónica
Universidad Austral de Chile Universidad Austral de Chile
Rı́o Bueno, Chile Puerto Montt, Chile
[email protected] [email protected]

Resumen—This document is a model and instructions for Keep your text and graphic files separate until after the text
LATEX. This and the IEEEtran.cls file define the components of has been formatted and styled. Do not number text heads—
your paper [title, text, heads, etc.]. *CRITICAL: Do Not Use LATEX will do that for you.
Symbols, Special Characters, Footnotes, or Math in Paper Title
or Abstract. III-A. Abbreviations and Acronyms
kdskdksksd
en este trabajo se investigo bakksaksk Define abbreviations and acronyms the first time they are
Index Terms—component, formatting, style, styling, insert used in the text, even after they have been defined in the
abstract. Abbreviations such as IEEE, SI, MKS, CGS, ac, dc,
I. I NTRODUCCI ÓN and rms do not have to be defined. Do not use abbreviations
En este trabajo se requiere diseñar un modelo eléctrico ba- in the title or heads unless they are unavoidable.
sado en el fenómeno fı́sico presente en un horno, recopilando
información . . . (seguir) III-B. Units
Use either SI (MKS) or CGS as primary units. (SI units
II. E ASE OF U SE are encouraged.) English units may be used as secondary
II-A. Maintaining the Integrity of the Specifications units (in parentheses). An exception would be the use of
The IEEEtran class file is used to format your paper and English units as identifiers in trade, such as “3.5-inch
style the text. All margins, column widths, line spaces, and disk drive”.
text fonts are prescribed; please do not alter them. You may Avoid combining SI and CGS units, such as current
note peculiarities. For example, the head margin measures in amperes and magnetic field in oersteds. This often
proportionately more than is customary. This measurement and leads to confusion because equations do not balance
others are deliberate, using specifications that anticipate your dimensionally. If you must use mixed units, clearly state
paper as one part of the entire proceedings, and not as an the units for each quantity that you use in an equation.
independent document. Please do not revise any of the current Do not mix complete spellings and abbreviations of
designations. units: “Wb/m2 ” or “webers per square meter”, not
“webers/m2 ”. Spell out units when they appear in text:
III. P REPARE YOUR PAPER B EFORE S TYLING “. . . a few henries”, not “. . . a few H”.
Before you begin to format your paper, first write and save Use a zero before decimal points: “0.25”, not “.25”. Use
the content as a separate text file. Complete all content and “cm3 ”, not “cc”.)
organizational editing before formatting. Please note sections III-C. Equations
III-A–III-E below for more information on proofreading, spe-
lling and grammar. Number equations consecutively. To make your equations
more compact, you may use the solidus ( / ), the exp
Identify applicable funding agency here. If none, delete this. function, or appropriate exponents. Italicize Roman symbols
for quantities and variables, but not Greek symbols. Use a of the closing parenthesis (like this). (A parenthetical
long dash rather than a hyphen for a minus sign. Punctuate sentence is punctuated within the parentheses.)
equations with commas or periods when they are part of a A graph within a graph is an “inset”, not an “insert”. The
sentence, as in: word alternatively is preferred to the word “alternately”
a+b=γ (1) (unless you really mean something that alternates).
Do not use the word “essentially” to mean “approxima-
Be sure that the symbols in your equation have been defined
tely” or “effectively”.
before or immediately following the equation. Use “(1)”, not
In your paper title, if the words “that uses” can accurately
“Eq. (1)” or “equation (1)”, except at the beginning of a
replace the word “using”, capitalize the “u”; if not, keep
sentence: “Equation (1) is . . .”
using lower-cased.
III-D. LATEX-Specific Advice Be aware of the different meanings of the homophones
Please use “soft” (e.g., \eqref{Eq}) cross references “affect” and “effect”, “complement” and “compliment”,
instead of “hard” references (e.g., (1)). That will make it “discreet” and “discrete”, “principal” and “principle”.
possible to combine sections, add equations, or change the Do not confuse “imply” and “infer”.
order of figures or citations without having to go through the The prefix “non” is not a word; it should be joined to
file line by line. the word it modifies, usually without a hyphen.
Please don’t use the {eqnarray} equation environ- There is no period after the “et” in the Latin abbreviation
ment. Use {align} or {IEEEeqnarray} instead. The “et al.”.
{eqnarray} environment leaves unsightly spaces around The abbreviation “i.e.” means “that is”, and the abbre-
relation symbols. viation “e.g.” means “for example”.
Please note that the {subequations} environment in An excellent style manual for science writers is [7].
LATEX will increment the main equation counter even when III-F. Authors and Affiliations
there are no equation numbers displayed. If you forget that,
The class file is designed for, but not limited to, six aut-
you might write an article in which the equation numbers skip
hors. A minimum of one author is required for all conference
from (17) to (20), causing the copy editors to wonder if you’ve
articles. Author names should be listed starting from left to
discovered a new method of counting.
right and then moving down to the next line. This is the author
BIBTEX does not work by magic. It doesn’t get the biblio-
sequence that will be used in future citations and by indexing
graphic data from thin air but from .bib files. If you use BIBTEX
services. Names should not be listed in columns nor group by
to produce a bibliography you must send the .bib files.
affiliation. Please keep your affiliations as succinct as possible
LATEX can’t read your mind. If you assign the same label to
(for example, do not differentiate among departments of the
a subsubsection and a table, you might find that Table I has
same organization).
been cross referenced as Table IV-B3.
LATEX does not have precognitive abilities. If you put a III-G. Identify the Headings
\label command before the command that updates the Headings, or heads, are organizational devices that guide the
counter it’s supposed to be using, the label will pick up the last reader through your paper. There are two types: component
counter to be cross referenced instead. In particular, a \label heads and text heads.
command should not go before the caption of a figure or a Component heads identify the different components of
table. your paper and are not topically subordinate to each other.
Do not use \nonumber inside the {array} environment. Examples include Acknowledgments and References and, for
It will not stop equation numbers inside {array} (there these, the correct style to use is “Heading 5”. Use “figure
won’t be any anyway) and it might stop a wanted equation caption” for your Figure captions, and “table head” for your
number in the surrounding equation. table title. Run-in heads, such as “Abstract”, will require you
III-E. Some Common Mistakes to apply a style (in this case, italic) in addition to the style
provided by the drop down menu to differentiate the head from
The word “data” is plural, not singular. the text.
The subscript for the permeability of vacuum µ0 , and Text heads organize the topics on a relational, hierarchical
other common scientific constants, is zero with subscript basis. For example, the paper title is the primary text head
formatting, not a lowercase letter “o”. because all subsequent material relates and elaborates on this
In American English, commas, semicolons, periods, one topic. If there are two or more sub-topics, the next
question and exclamation marks are located within quo- level head (uppercase Roman numerals) should be used and,
tation marks only when a complete thought or name is conversely, if there are not at least two sub-topics, then no
cited, such as a title or full quotation. When quotation subheads should be introduced.
marks are used, instead of a bold or italic typeface, to
highlight a word or phrase, punctuation should appear III-H. Figures and Tables
outside of the quotation marks. A parenthetical phrase or III-H0a. Positioning Figures and Tables: Place figures
statement at the end of a sentence is punctuated outside and tables at the top and bottom of columns. Avoid placing
them in the middle of columns. Large figures and tables may the first word in a paper title, except for proper nouns and
span across both columns. Figure captions should be below element symbols.
the figures; table heads should appear above the tables. Insert For papers published in translation journals, please give the
figures and tables after they are cited in the text. Use the English citation first, followed by the original foreign-language
abbreviation “Fig. 1”, even at the beginning of a sentence. citation [6].
R EFERENCIAS
Cuadro I
TABLE T YPE S TYLES [1] G. Eason, B. Noble, and I. N. Sneddon, “On certain integrals of
Lipschitz-Hankel type involving products of Bessel functions,” Phil.
Table Table Column Head Trans. Roy. Soc. London, vol. A247, pp. 529–551, April 1955.
Head Table column subhead Subhead Subhead [2] J. Clerk Maxwell, A Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism, 3rd ed., vol.
copy More table copya 2. Oxford: Clarendon, 1892, pp.68–73.
a Sample of a Table footnote. [3] I. S. Jacobs and C. P. Bean, “Fine particles, thin films and exchange
anisotropy,” in Magnetism, vol. III, G. T. Rado and H. Suhl, Eds. New
York: Academic, 1963, pp. 271–350.
[4] K. Elissa, “Title of paper if known,” unpublished.
[5] R. Nicole, “Title of paper with only first word capitalized,” J. Name
Stand. Abbrev., in press.
[6] Y. Yorozu, M. Hirano, K. Oka, and Y. Tagawa, “Electron spectroscopy
studies on magneto-optical media and plastic substrate interface,” IEEE
Transl. J. Magn. Japan, vol. 2, pp. 740–741, August 1987 [Digests 9th
Annual Conf. Magnetics Japan, p. 301, 1982].
[7] M. Young, The Technical Writer’s Handbook. Mill Valley, CA: Univer-
sity Science, 1989.

Figura 1. Example of a figure caption. IEEE conference templates contain guidance text for compo-
sing and formatting conference papers. Please ensure that all
Figure Labels: Use 8 point Times New Roman for Figure template text is removed from your conference paper prior to
labels. Use words rather than symbols or abbreviations when submission to the conference. Failure to remove the template
writing Figure axis labels to avoid confusing the reader. As an text from your paper may result in your paper not being
example, write the quantity “Magnetization”, or “Magnetiza- published.
tion, M”, not just “M”. If including units in the label, present
them within parentheses. Do not label axes only with units. In
the example, write “Magnetization (A/m)” or “Magnetization
{A[m(1)]}”, not just “A/m”. Do not label axes with a ratio of
quantities and units. For example, write “Temperature (K)”,
not “Temperature/K”.

ACKNOWLEDGMENT
The preferred spelling of the word “acknowledgment” in
America is without an “e” after the “g”. Avoid the stilted
expression “one of us (R. B. G.) thanks . . .”. Instead, try
“R. B. G. thanks. . .”. Put sponsor acknowledgments in the
unnumbered footnote on the first page.

R EFERENCES
Please number citations consecutively within brackets [1].
The sentence punctuation follows the bracket [2]. Refer simply
to the reference number, as in [3]—do not use “Ref. [3]”
or “reference [3]” except at the beginning of a sentence:
“Reference [3] was the first . . .”
Number footnotes separately in superscripts. Place the ac-
tual footnote at the bottom of the column in which it was
cited. Do not put footnotes in the abstract or reference list.
Use letters for table footnotes.
Unless there are six authors or more give all authors’ names;
do not use “et al.”. Papers that have not been published,
even if they have been submitted for publication, should be
cited as “unpublished” [4]. Papers that have been accepted for
publication should be cited as “in press” [5]. Capitalize only

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