
The Open Archive for Engineering research, accelerating technical knowledge exchange through rapid preprint dissemination.
engrXiv (Engineering Archive) is a community-led preprint server dedicated to the engineering community, functioning as a specialized repository within the Open Science Framework (OSF) ecosystem. Architecturally, it leverages the Center for Open Science's (COS) infrastructure, providing a robust, decentralized backbone for the storage and retrieval of technical papers, datasets, and supplemental research materials. By 2026, engrXiv has positioned itself as the primary alternative to traditional paywalled engineering journals, enabling 'Green Open Access' that complies with global mandates like Plan S. It utilizes the Crossref metadata schema to mint persistent Digital Object Identifiers (DOIs), ensuring that pre-publication research is citable and findable. The platform supports a wide array of file formats and integrates directly with reference management software and ORCID identifiers. Its moderation workflow balances speed with quality control, utilizing a board of subject-matter experts to screen submissions for basic scientific integrity without the lengthy delays associated with traditional peer review. For engineering firms and academic institutions, engrXiv provides a mechanism for rapid technical disclosure and intellectual priority timestamping.
Automatic assignment of a Crossref DOI to every accepted preprint, ensuring permanent linkability.
Verified feedback from the global deployment network.
Post queries, share implementation strategies, and help other users.
Bi-directional syncing between the preprint and a larger OSF project containing raw data and code.
Maintains a full history of document revisions with distinct timestamps for each version.
A technical screening process by engineering professionals to ensure submissions meet basic scientific standards.
Optimized metadata extraction for LaTeX-generated documents common in engineering research.
Support for BibTeX, RIS, and EndNote formats directly from the document landing page.
Integration with Altmetric to track mentions in news, blogs, and social media platforms.
Traditional peer review takes 6-12 months, which is too slow for emergency engineering responses.
Registry Updated:2/7/2026
Publicly funded research (e.g., NSF, Horizon Europe) requires papers to be freely available immediately.
Journals often have strict file size limits for supplementary data.