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The Journal of Lightwave Technology is comprised of original contributions, both regular papers and letters, covering work in all aspects of optical guided-wave science, technology, and engineering. Manuscripts are solicited which report original theoretical and/or experimental results which advance the technological base of guided-wave technology. Tutorial and review papers are by invitation only.
16.9 weeks
Time to Publication
4.8
Impact Factor
OPEN CALLS FOR PAPERS
Information on upcoming publications with open paper and poster submissions for the IEEE Photonics Society.
Description
The journal consistently receives high ratings in the annual journal citation rankings for all periodicals in the fields of Electrical Engineering, Telecommunications and Optics.
Magnus Karlsson, Editor-in-Chief
All manuscripts must be submitted in a standard two-column, single-spaced format. Make sure to have all figures included within the text in order to get an accurate page count estimate, which is important for estimating publication costs. Please note that all figures must be sized to be clearly legible when printed. No font size used within a figure should be smaller than the default font size of the figure caption. Please upload a MS Word document and a PDF to IEEE Author Portal. The link to IEEE Author Portal as well as various templates and detailed style guides may be found here:
Contributed submissions may be 7 pages in length, optionally including author biographies, before incurring mandatory over length page charges (see below). Author photographs are not published.
The abstract must be a concise yet comprehensive reflection of the main statements made in your article. In particular, the abstract must be self-contained, without abbreviations, footnotes, or references. The abstract must be written as one paragraph, and should not contain displayed mathematical equations or tabular material. The abstract should include three or four different keywords or phrases, as this will help search engines to better find your paper.
Are you including a graphical abstract with your submission? If so, please review our author instructions for format, naming convention and size guidelines found here. Please be sure to name your file as detailed in these guidelines. Graphical Abstracts must be peer reviewed and cannot be added after acceptance.
As per IEEE regulations: https://www.ieee.org/documents/opsmanual.pdf , authorship credit must be reserved for individuals who have met all three of the following conditions:
Contributors who meet fewer than all 3 of the above criteria for authorship should not be listed as co-authors, but may be acknowledged. Examples of activities that alone (without the other three contributions) do not qualify a contributor for authorship are acquisition of funding; general supervision of a research group or general administrative support; and writing assistance, technical editing, language editing, and proofreading.
If English is your second language, please be sure to either have a colleague proofread your paper or use professional editing services. You may find the following editing website useful for a cost:
American Journal Experts at http://www.aje.com/go/ieee/ *IEEE authors receive a 10% discount
Enago: http://www.enago.com/ieee/ *IEEE authors receive a 30% discount
Please note that submissions that are hard to understand due to poor English will be immediately rejected.
If your work is essentially a re-submission to JLT of work that has been previously been rejected either by JLT or by any other journal, please include with your submission:
Failure to do so may result in your manuscript being immediately rejected without review.
All JLT manuscripts have to be original and the authors’ own body of work. An essentially similar copy of the same paper must not have been submitted nor must it be submitted at a later point in time to any other journal or conference. While IEEE and OPTICA PUBLISHING GROUP do support evolutionary publishing of an author’s own body of work, it is mandatory in such cases to (1) minimize direct 1:1 overlap in text and figures wherever possible, (2) properly reference the earlier paper(s) whenever copies of text and figures are made, and (3) highlight in the introduction the technical advances of the submission to JLT with respect to earlier work. The submitted manuscript should not exceed a 40% overlap with previously accepted or published versions of the work.
In order to determine whether your JLT submission contains enough new material compared to any of your previously published journal or conference, please self-assess whether a reader who has access to your JLT paper in addition to all of your previously published work would consider the JLT paper of significant added value. This is the guideline that our Editorial Board uses to determine whether or not a JLT submission contains enough new material or not. – Note that “significant added value” can take many forms, including a more elaborate placement into the context of previously reported results within a field, more elaborate technical descriptions, discussions, and interpretations of methods or results, results that go beyond those previously reported, important intermediate results or non-trivial derivations that were not previously shown, etc.
Please also check the following links for more information:
OPTICA PUBLISHING GROUP Plagiarism Guidelines
Authors acknowledge adherence to these regulations through execution of the IEEE Copyright Form upon online submission through ScholarOne Manuscripts.
All JLT submissions are expected to be self-contained. Their technical understanding must not rely on any unpublished material.
The use of artificial intelligence (AI)–generated text in an article shall be disclosed in the acknowledgements section of any paper submitted to an IEEE Conference or Periodical. The sections of the paper that use AI-generated text shall have a citation to the AI system used to generate the text.
When using on-line repositories (such as ArXiv), please note that (1) upon submission of an article to JLT, you must update any previously posted version of your submitted article with a prominently displayed IEEE copyright notice, and (2) upon publication of an article by JLT, you must replace any previously posted electronic versions of the article with either (a) the full citation to the JLT paper with it s Digital Object Identifier (DOI), or (b) the JLT accepted version with the DOI (not the IEEE-typeset version). Upon your request, IEEE will make available toyou the preprint version of your article that you can post and that includes the DOI, IEEE’s copyright notice, and a notice indicating the article has been accepted for publication in JLT.
When submitting the manuscript, authors are encouraged to submit supplemental material in the form of:
To enhance the appearance of your article on IEEEXplore®, a graphical abstract can be displayed along with traditional text. The graphical abstract should provide a clear, visual summary of your article’s findings by means of an image, animation, video, or audio clip. NOTE: The graphical abstract is considered a part of the technical content of the article, and you must provide it for peer review during the article submission process.
For more information about how to prepare supplementary material, please visit the following link: https://journals.ieeeauthorcenter.ieee.org/create-your-ieee-journal-article/prepare-supplementary-materials/
IEEE authors may upload up to 2TB of data related to their article to IEEE DataPort https://ieee-dataport.org/ at no cost (or at low cost if the dataset must be Open Access).
IEEE DataPort™ serves as a valuable and easily accessible repository of datasets and data analysis tools. The repository is designed to accept all types of datasets, including Big Data datasets up to 2TB, and it provides both downloading capabilities and access to Cloud services to enable data analysis in the Cloud. IEEE DataPort™ is a universally accessible web-based portal that serves four primary purposes:
Once your data is uploaded to IEEE DataPort, a DOI (Digital Object Identifier) will be provided immediately. The IEEE DataPort DOI should be entered in the DOI field in the paper submission mask and should be included in your main manuscript file. Providing data with your article can strengthen your submission and make your research more easily reproducible.
You can upload your data files to IEEE DataPort at any time (before, during or after the publication process).
The About IEEE DataPort page https://ieee-dataport.org/about-ieee-dataport provides instructions and answers to commonly asked questions.
Upon submission, your manuscript will be checked for formal template compliance before the Editor-in-Chief examines the paper for scope compliance, language proficiency, as well as basic technical content and novelty. Out-of-scope papers, as well as papers of insufficient technical content or quality, may be immediately rejected upon consultation within the Editorial Board. Additional information on the journal scope and topic categories can be found here. After passing these initial editorial steps, the Editor-in-Chief assigns your manuscript to an Associate Editor who is an expert in the respective paper’s topic area. Authors also have the opportunity to suggest a preferred Associate Editor (or to exclude certain Associate Editors as “non-preferred”) upon submission. We will always honor non-preferred Associate Editor selections if these are based on clear precedence that could lead to a potentially biased review process. (The mere fact that an Associate Editor may also be a competitor working in the exact same field as your paper is not a reason for exclusion.) We will try to honor preferred Associate Editor choices, but only if your preferences make technical sense and if the current Associate Editor workload permits the assignment. The Associate Editor selects a minimum of two reviewers who are experts in the field of your paper. As with Associate Editors, you may designate preferred and non-preferred reviewers upon on-line submission. As with Associate Editor preferences, we will always honor your non-preferred selections if based on clear precedence that could lead to a potentially biased review, and we will try to honor your preferred reviewer choices based on technical expertise and reviewer workloads. Authors can track the status of their submission at any time through their Author Portal. Please note that all technical work performed in this paper handling process, including all work performed by the Editor-in-Chief, the Deputy Editors, the Associate Editors, and the Reviewers, is based on volunteers. While we constantly strive to keep reviewing times to a minimum, we place strong emphasis on technical quality. The average turn-around time (from submission to decision) is currently about 40 days.
JLT allows for two revision cycles. Should your manuscript require more than two revisions, it may be rejected, but you are welcome to resubmit in case you can fully address all reviewer concerns.
Once accepted, your paper will be placed on-line on IEEE Xplore Early Access within 2-3 days and can be fully referenced at that point using the digital object identifier (DOI), even if it hasn’t yet appeared in a printed JLT issue.
The articles in this journal are peer reviewed in accordance with the requirements set forth in the IEEE Publication Services and Products Board Operations Manual (https://pspb.ieee.org/images/files/files/opsmanual.pdf). Each published article is reviewed by a minimum of two independent reviewers using a single-anonymous process, where the identities of the reviewers are not known to the authors, but the reviewers know the identities of the authors. Articles will be screened for plagiarism as part of the initial submission check.
JLT provides authors with two publication options following the hybrid open access publication model:
Open-access publishing: Here, authors pay one-time publication charges, which make their paper accessible free-of-charge to anybody with an Internet connection (such as used by OpticsExpress or the IEEE Photonics Journal).
JLT 2025 Article Processing Charges (APCs) are as follows:
Other page charges:
Overlength page charges: $260.00 per page in excess of 7 pages
The color charge fee structure has been simplified to a flat $275 USD per printed color figure.
Discounts cannot be combined or applied to any other fees such as over-length article or color page charges.
Traditional subscriber-based publishing: Here, authors pay voluntary page charges of $110.00 per page up to 7 pages. A mandatory fee of $260.00 applies to every page in excess of 7 pages. IEEE and OPTICA PUBLISHING GROUP make the papers available through individual or library-based subscription services through IEEEXplore and the Optica Publishing Group Platform.
Note that due to its denser typesetting, one JLT page is equivalent, on average, to about 1.6 pages in other open-access journals such as the IEEE Photonics Journal or Optics Express
Applicable taxes will be added to all Open Access, Overlength ,Voluntary page charges as well as reprint orders at time of processing for bill to addresses in Canada and in all European Union countries. Bill to customers who are VAT registered in European Union countries will not have tax added when they provide their VAT registration number.
The Journal of Lightwave technology is NOT an accept-Pay -publish journal.
NEW POLICY FOR PRINTED COPIES OF JLT ISSUES. Complementary print copies are no longer sent to any author, unless they are specifically requested. To obtain a complimentary printed copy of the issue in which your paper appears, please contact Journal Production Manager Christopher Perry at c.perry@ieee.org
As a top journal in its field, JLT strives to publish work with high technical impact. A concise impact statement helps our Editors to assess your paper prior to entering peer review. Your impact statement must be concise (at most 100 words), should not simply be a copy of the abstract, and must contain information on the significant and impactful contributions beyond the state of the art that you believe are reported in your submission. A paper may have “impact” in various dimensions, including:
New concepts that solve a problem better than the state of the art in at least one aspect (speed, capacity, power, size, complexity, …)
Unprecedented and non-incremental experimental results
In-depth studies that compare different solutions and result in novel conclusions
Yes, if there is proper disclosure of information. The use of content generated by artificial intelligence (AI) in an article (including but not limited to text, figures, images, and code) shall be disclosed in the acknowledgments section of any article submitted to an IEEE publication. The AI system used shall be identified, and specific sections of the article that use AI-generated content shall be identified and accompanied by a brief explanation regarding the level at which the AI system was used to generate the content.
The use of AI systems for editing and grammar enhancement is common practice and, as such, is generally outside the intent of the above policy. In this case, disclosure as noted above is recommended.
In general, reproduction of previously published material should be avoided if at all possible, and earlier work should instead be referenced in your JLT submission. To reproduce previously published material, you need to do all of the following:
• Obtain written permission from the contact or lead author of the previous publication.
• If the previous publication is not an IEEE publication, obtain written permission from the copyright holding organization to reproduce the material. This also applies if you reproduce your own work published under a third party’s copyright.
• Clearly indicate in your submission the material that is being reproduced.
• State in the introduction of your paper in how far your work goes beyond previously published work which you partially reproduce in your JLT submission.
Requesting permission through IEEE
Permission to reuse IEEE content, including use in a thesis or dissertation, must be given through the Copyright Clearance Center’s RightsLink service, using IEEE Xplore.
1. Please locate the content beginning at http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/Xplore/home.jsp.
2. Once on the abstract page of the article, please locate the “Request Permission” link in the left navigation panel.
3. You can also find the copyright symbol directly on the article Table of Content.
4. If you find there are none of these links, you should open the free front pages of the content to determine if there is another rights holder, as this is an indication that IEEE is not the intellectual-property rights holder and cannot grant permission for reuse.
5. If the links are there, please choose one, as this will take you to the permission application page.
If you are not able to use the RightsLink service, permission licensing may also be obtained through www.copyright.com.
If you experience difficulty with the RightsLink service, please contact the customer care group at customercare@copyright.com or write to IEEE Publications at pubs-permissions@ieee.org.
Both IEEE and Optica Publishing Group support evolutionary publishing of an author’s own body of work, such as submitting a first account of the work to a conference, a second, more detailed analysis to a Letters publication, and a third, significantly extended version or a summary of several related pieces of prior work to a full-length journal like JLT. The guiding principle for evolutionary publishing is that a reader must have a significant advantage of reading the next evolutionary stage of publication compared to having access to earlier stages. As such, simple 1:1 reproduction of prior work does not justify a JLT submission. Whenever re-using prior results, it is mandatory to (1) minimize direct 1:1 overlap in text and figures wherever possible, (2) properly reference all earlier paper(s) whenever copies of text and figures are made, and (3) highlight in the introduction the technical advances of the JLT submission with respect to earlier work or the rationale behind summarizing multiple prior conference papers in a full-length journal paper. Papers that do not follow these guidelines will be immediately rejected without review.
The first hurdle every JLT submission must pass is the editorial screening. Several reasons might lead to immediate rejection in this phase, before any reviewers have been assigned:
• Out-of-scope: The topic covered in your manuscript does not fall within the scope of JLT.
• Quality of text or figures: The English or the figures in your manuscript are of insufficient quality to allow for a solid technical review, during which the reviewers should focus on the technical content as opposed to on non-technical aspects of your write-up.
• Insufficient novelty: The technical content covered by your paper is not at a level that allows for a meaningful JLT review process. Immediate rejection on these grounds is always based on the technical opinion of at least 3 members of the Editorial Board, and a brief technical justification is typically provided.
The Journal of Lightwave Technology is entirely based on volunteers doing the technical part of the work, including the Editor-in-Chief, the Deputy Editors, the Associate Editors, and the Reviewers. While we strive to provide the fastest possible review times, we do not compromise on the quality of our reviews. Finding diligent yet responsive expert reviewers can sometimes be difficult, which may result in longer review times than the average of around 40 days. The best way of speeding up JLT’s review times is to become a speedy, high-quality reviewer yourself. In order to do so, please submit your publication list and your areas of expertise to jltstaff@ieee.org. Your volunteer work will be highly appreciated!
The decision about a paper’s acceptance or rejection is not a simple majority vote between reviews but is a complex process, weighing multiple factors of which the reviews are as important as the technical judgment of the Editorial Board. Please also note that if we believe a paper requires such extensive revisions that we don’t think these can be addressed in a major revision phase, we may decide to reject the paper in its current state. Furthermore, if a revised paper fails to address the reviewer concerns, we may decide to reject the paper at that point.
No process is perfect, and we certainly do make occasional mistakes in our decisions, although we try not to. If you have strong technical arguments as to why you think our decision was wrong and your paper should be published, please send a rebuttal letter to jltstaff@ieee.org, laying out your technical arguments.
The Editorial Board will then examine the case and reach a decision as to whether or not the paper will be allowed for revisions. However, please note that a rebuttal process is involved and requires several members of the Editorial Board to examine your paper in detail. Depending on the case, this may take a substantial amount of time. As an alternative, you can refrain from a formal rebuttal but rather address all reviewer comments to their full extent and re-submit your paper to JLT, indicating that this is a re-submission, attaching a detailed response to the original reviews, and indicating the changes you made to your manuscript. The handling Associate Editor will then examine whether your re-submission incorporates substantial enough revisions for another review process to make sense.
Authors who have submitted or plan to submit their articles to IEEE may post their preprints in the following locations:
• arXiv.org, TechRxiv.org, or any not-for-profit preprint server approved by the Publication Services and Products Board (PSPB)
• Author’s employer’s website or institutional repository
• Author’s personal website
IEEE does not consider this to be a form of prior publication. The following statement must be included on the initial screen:
“This work has been submitted to the IEEE for possible publication. Copyright may be transferred without notice, after which this version may no longer be accessible.”
Upon acceptance of the article by IEEE, the author must replace the posted preprint article with either (1) the full citation to the IEEE work with the DOI, or (2) the accepted version of the article with the DOI and an appropriate copyright notice (as described in the “accepted article” section below). No other changes may be made to the accepted article.
Please note that once the article has been published by IEEE, preprints on locations not specified above should be removed if possible.
Please submit your publication list and your areas of expertise to jltstaff@ieee.org. Your volunteer work will be highly appreciated!
No. IEEE policy states the following regarding the use of AI by peer reviewers: Information or content contained in or about a manuscript under review shall not be processed through a public platform (directly or indirectly) for AI generation of text for a review. Doing so is considered a breach of confidentiality because AI systems generally learn from any input.
Choosing Associate Editors is at the heart of ensuring the high quality standards of JLT. As such, the selection process is extremely selective and has to pass several stages of quality control and voting, where topical, geographic, institutional, and gender diversity within the Editorial Board are also taken into account. If you would like to contribute to JLT as an Associate Editor and you believe that you are a suitable candidate whose technical background and expertise compare favorably with existing members of the Editorial Board, please send an email with your cv and publication list to jltstaff@ieee.org.
If you find an essential technical mistake in your own JLT paper, please submit “Comments/Corrections” to https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/jlt-ieee, indicating the paper and the mistake in it, and writing a short clarification that corrects the mistake. This document will be examined within the Editorial Board and published accordingly. If you discover a mistake in another author’s publication, it is good practice to inform the other author of the mistake and initiate a dialogue. As an outcome of this dialogue, the other author may choose to publish an “Comments/Corrections”, or you may choose to publish a “Comments/Corrections” on the paper in question. For further questions, contact jltstaff@ieee.org.
The new eCF has expanded features that meet the evolving publishing world.The eCF now provides additional publishing agreements such as the Open Access Publishing Agreement, and the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license. Authors submitting to hybrid journals now will be given a clear explanation of publishing options and will have an opportunity to select their preferred publishing model(Traditional or Open Access). The eCF has also added extensive information sidebars throughout the process to help instruct authors about each step, and an overall streamlined process.
As with the original eCF, the eCF2 allows authors to choose from a variety of languages (Chinese, French, German, Japanese, Russian,Spanish),and will provide authors with an opportunity to reassign the eCF to another author or agent if necessary.
If you would like more information about the new eCF2, please contact the IEEE IPR or visit the IPR Office web site at http://www.ieee.org/IPR or http://www.ieee.org/eCF.
The JLT Editorial Board is composed of recognized experts in all the fields covered by journal scope. It is a diverse team in terms of age, gender, ethnicity, research areas, work environment, and geographical location.
Magnus Karlsson, Editor-in-Chief
Douglas Hargis
Phone +1 732 562 6829
d.hargis@ieee.org
Steven Perez
Phone +1 732 562 6072
steven.perez@ieee.org
General Inquires
jltstaff@ieee.org
Mike Cardinale
Afshin Daryoush
Optica Publishing Group Representatives
Nikola Alic
Chris Doerr
Aerospace and Electronic Systems Society
Peter K. Willett
Michael A. Cardinale
Communications Soc.
Maite Brandt-Pearce
Mohamed-Slim Alouini
Electron Devices Society
Yeshaiahu Fainman
John Dallesasse
Instrumentation & Measurement Soc.
George Xiao
Brainslav Djokic
Microwave Theory & Techniques Soc.
Afshin Daryoush
Shilong Pan
Photonics Society
Leslie Rusch
Roland Ryf
View the Editorial Board History page to see past Editorial Board members for the Journal of Lightwave Technology. This list includes Editors-in-Chief, Deputy Editors, Associate Editors, and Publicity Editors, with information dating back to 1983.
For a list of past board members, please click here.
Annually, we recognize significant contributions to the Journal of Lightwave Technology with the following awards:
JLT Outstanding Reviewer Award
This award is presented by the Journal’s Editor in Chief to reviewers who stand out for the ability to provide timely, in-depth reviews of a significant number of submissions, thereby playing a crucial role in fulfilling the journal’s mission to disseminate cutting-edge, high-quality research. The award recognizes researchers who consistently provided comprehensive, insightful, high-quality reviews over the course of a year.