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1 [Title of the Paper] Template for Metfoam Proceedins [Full Name of the Author(s)] Miguel Angel Rodriguez-Perez 1 , Eusebio Solorzano 1 [Affiliations, full addresses and email addresses for the corresponding author and for as many authors as supplied] 1 CellMat Laboratory, Condensed Matter Physics Department, University of Valladolid Faculty of Science, Paseo de Belen 7, 47011, Valladolid, Spain Corresponding author: [email protected] Abstract The abstract (maximum 300 words) summarizes the content of the proceeding. The abstract (maximum 300 words) summarizes the content of the proceeding. The abstract (maximum 300 words) summarizes the content of the proceeding. The abstract (maximum 300 words) summarizes the content of the proceeding. The abstract (maximum 300 words) summarizes the content of the proceeding. 1 Introduction This is a camera-ready manuscript which will not be further reduced in size. Please do not change the margins and other settings of the Microsoft-WORD template. We cannot accept manuscripts written in another program than Microsoft WORD 97 or later. We apologize that Latex-Users have to convert to an inferior program but unfortunately WORD is the standard in the engineering community nowadays. The final proceeding will be upload in PDF format 2 Page Format Use this WORD template and use predefined margins. The grey box shows the final margins of the report. The maximum number of pages is 4. 3 Text Normal text should be written in 10pt letters with font (Times). Format by selecting “Normal/Standard” in the format menu. 3.1 Abbreviations, Numbers, Units, and Equations. Abbreviations are spelled out the first time used with the abbreviation in parentheses. If used in connection with numbers, the Units (SI units are preferred) are abbreviated. Digits are used for all numbers larger than ten. When a number is used with a unit, the numeral is used and the unit is abbreviated. Commas are used to separate thousands and the decimal point to separate decimals. In a range, all digits are repeated. Displayed equations are numbered section-wise with the equation number to the right of the equation. Within equations, numbers, punctuation, parentheses, common function names, units, or mathematical signs are set upright; variables are set in italics, and vectors are set in bold. If the equation is part of a sentence, punctuation follows normal language rules. Text references to equations take the forms “(6)” or “(6-8)”. 2 Table 4.1 Gallos ab Aquitanis Garumna flumen Aetas 0-5 menses 6-12 menses >1-2 anni > 2-3 anni >5-6 anni Adultesa SD standard deviation a Helvetii Mean cm 3.9 4.3 4.7 5.1 5.5 13.3 1 SD 0.8 0.8 0.9 0.9 0.9 1.6 2.5 SD 1.9 2.3 2.6 2.9 3.3 9.3 Table 4.2 Die constituta causae dictionis Orgetorix ad iudicium omnem suam familiam, ad hominum milia decem, undique coegit, et omnes clientes obaeratosque suos, quorum magnum numerum habebat, eodem conduxit; per eos ne causam diceret se eripuit. (Salardi el al. 1985) Rauracis Latobrigis Iurae <9 mm Iurae >9 mm Year Tulingis % % m 1 SD 2 5 0.75 0.41 3 6 0.66 0.17 4 14 0.82 0.36 14.3 m mean, 1 SD standard deviation 3.2 Text formatting Didactic elements such as examples, questions or exercises, summaries or key messages that repeat can be set on a gray box. Emphasized words or phrases in running text are set in italics. Italics are used for species and genus names, mathematical/physical variables, prefixes in chemical compounds, and foreign words (if not yet in general use). Foreign words being in general use (e.g., ad hoc, laissez-faire, a priori, in vivo, et al., etc.) are formatted upright. Bold formatting is used for run-in headings. Small capitals indicate optical activity (D- and L-dopa). Sans serif (e.g., Arial) and nonproportional font (e.g., Courier) distinguish the literal text of computer programs from running text. Small print is used for displayed quotations. An en dash is used in ranges, an em dash for setting off parenthetical expressions. Reference citations are given in running text with author name(s) and year of publication in parentheses (Banhart et al. 1998). 4. Tables, lists, figures and illustrations Each figure (picture, diagram, drawing etc.) should have a caption describing its content and should be numbered. The caption should be detailed enough that its contents can be understood without reading the text. 4.1 Tables 4.1.1 Table Captions Table captions begin with the term Table in bold type, followed by the table number, also in bold type. Previously published material is identified by a reference to the original source at the end of the caption. Table captions have no end punctuation and no period after the table number. 4.1.2 Table rules Table must follow one of the two presented examples (Tables 4.1 and 4.2). Manually inserted rules or shading of table rows and table cells cannot be retained. 3 Table footnotes appear in the following sequence: Comments of a general nature Explanations of abbreviations in a run-in list Footnotes, arranged first by asterisk (p values), then by lowercase letter Tables should appear on the top of the page as close as possible to their first citation. 4.2 Lists Lists can have one or two levels: Main items (indicated by a bullet point or a number) Sub-items (indicated by a dash) Pairs of terms and their definitions can be displayed in a list rather than a table. Fig 4.1 Gallos ab Aquitanis Garumna flumen, a Belgis Matrona et Sequana dividit Fig 4.2 a Gallos ab Garumna flumen, b Belgis Matrona et Sequana, c Romani signa potuit 4.3 Figures 4.3.1 Figure Captions 4 Figure captions begin with the term Fig. in bold type, followed by the figure number, also in bold type. Figure parts are identified by lowercase letters in bold Letters or words identifying specific positions or items in a figure are italicized Previously published material is identified by a reference to the original source at the end of the caption Figure captions have no end punctuation and no period after the figure number All the figures should appear at the top or bottom of the page as close as possible to their first citation 4.3.2 Figure lettering and labelling Minimum size of 2 mm (6 pt) for lettering Part figure labels in lowercase letters Colour figures are accepted but will usually printed in black and white Please ensure to use good quality images for your figures or micrographs (300dpi). Drawings should contain black and sufficiently thick lines and no grey scales and half-tones. Lettering has to be sufficiently large (min. 10 pt). References References are cited in the text indicating the name of first author and the year of publication in brackets, i.e., (Banhart et al. 1998). The formatting of the references is as follows: Paper: J. Banhart, J. Baumeister, J. Mater. Sci. 33, 1431-1440 (1998) Book: L. J. Gibson, M. F. Ashby, Cellular Solids, 2nd edn. (Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge, 1997), pp 4556 Book Chapter: D.M. Abrams, in Conductive Polymers, ed. by R.S. Seymour, A. Smith (Springer, Berlin Heidelberg New York, 1973), p. 307 Book edited: R.S. Seymour (ed.), Conductive Polymers (Plenum, New York, 1981) Conference Proceeding N. Babcsán, D. Leitlmeier, H. P. Degisher, H. J. Frankl, Proc. Int. Conf. on Cellular Metals and Metal Foaming Technology, Eds: J. Banhart, N. Fleck, A. Mortensen (MIT-Publishing, Berlin, 2003), p. 101