Sensors And Transducers Journal Impact Factor (2026)
| Journal | Official JCR Impact Factor (2024/5) | Indexing | Quartile | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | None (Not indexed) | Scopus (low), Google Scholar | Q4 | | Sensors (MDPI) | 3.4 – 3.9 | SCIE, Scopus | Q2 | | IEEE Sensors Journal | 4.3 – 4.9 | SCIE, Scopus | Q1/Q2 | | Sensors and Actuators B: Chem | 8.0 – 9.0 | SCIE, Scopus | Q1 | | ACS Sensors | 8.2 – 8.9 | SCIE, Scopus | Q1 | Final Verdict for Authors and Readers Sensors and Transducers does not have a recognized Clarivate Impact Factor . Its alternative metrics (CiteScore ~0.8, SJR <0.20) place it in the lowest tier of peer-reviewed journals. It is acceptable for preliminary or low-stakes publications but is not suitable for research requiring high visibility or a strong journal reputation. Recommendation: Before submitting, verify your institution’s publication guidelines. If they require a journal with an Impact Factor, do not choose Sensors and Transducers . If they only require any peer-reviewed Scopus or Google Scholar listing, the journal remains a valid, though low-impact, option.
If you need to share libs across workstations (eg. at a company) you can add a repository located on a shared network drive once it’s mapped in Windows. This is how we can lock library versions and not have any problems!
The only concern about sharing libraries through network shared folders is that if someone has to go then on a macchine in a non-connected environment, then the opening of library manager will take really long time (at last since o.s. returns timeout network availability error)…
Sometimes this is not the most efficient solution.
Very well written!