Dear sir, please check the journal's home page, there most of the journals specify the average time period of first decision, acceptance and publishing.
Fast publication Scopus index journal with more than 1 impact factor, in organic chemistry review paper : 1) Synthetic communication 2) Research on Chemical Intermediates
Dear Punet Kumar I fully agree with Mahmood A. Al-shareeda . It's always worth a try to submit your valuable manuscript initially to a journal with a good impact factor of ca. 3-4. If it's accepts (e.g. with minor revision) you will be very happy. Even if the manuscript is not accepted, you will receive useful comments from the reviewers which will help improving the quality of the manuscript. After revision, it will definitively be accepted by a journal with a slightly lower impact factor.
The process of peer review is not as smooth as we thought. The process for each paper requires getting (a) Academic Editor, (b) Reviewers, (c) Getting response from the Reviewers within a short period of time. I would advice that you should not be looking for a fast publication Scopus index journal.
Secondly, check the abstract index of the journals that published some papers you have recently studied.
Dear Isaac Lare Animasaun I agree with you in that the peer-review process can be tedious and time-consuming. However, it is the only worldwide accepted way to ensure a high quality of your manuscript. In my personal experience, ca. 95% of all reviewers' comments which I received for my papers were helpful.
Dear Abdulaziz Albannai my personal experience with MDPI journals was quite good in the past. We published 3-4 research papers in MDPI journals (Crystals, Inorganics). In all cases the peer-review process was professional and quite fast, and the overall service was also pretty good. The only drawback is, as you mentioned, that they are too expensive.
Dear Abdulaziz Albannai yes, you are right. The quality of the manuscript is often the key to rapid peer-review. If you want even faster publication, predatory journals offer 24 hour service....😎
Dear Frank T. Edelmann you are absolutely right, predatory journals offering very fast publication timeline, but MDPI journals are really good and they reviewing the work very well in the same time they publish it in a short period of time. In addition, they are Q2 journals.
You may search Scopus for a recent published article within your scope. Then send your article to the journal for review. However, try to also check the abstract indexing on the journal's home page.
Dear Madhukar Baburao Deshmukh yes, you are absolutely right. The choice of organic chemistry journals with a good impact factor listed in Scopus is quite large. It should be no problem to find suitable journals which charge no publication fees.