AIP Publishing, a prominent publisher of scientific journals in physics and related fields, has significantly expanded its open access offerings through a series of institutional agreements tailored to support researchers at United States universities and colleges. These developments, including the introduction of the AIP Fusion model, aim to remove financial barriers and streamline the process of making research freely available.
Background on AIP Publishing and Open Access
AIP Publishing operates as the publishing arm of the American Institute of Physics, producing a portfolio of hybrid and fully open access journals focused on the physical sciences. Open access publishing allows immediate, free online access to research articles, typically under Creative Commons licenses such as CC BY 4.0. This model contrasts with traditional subscription-based access, where readers or institutions pay for content.
In the United States, federal agencies like the National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation have long encouraged open access through public access policies. University libraries and consortia across the country have increasingly sought transformative agreements that combine reading access with open access publishing rights.
The AIP Fusion Model: A New Approach
In 2025, AIP Publishing announced AIP Fusion, an all-inclusive services agreement designed in collaboration with libraries and consortia. This model provides participating institutions with unlimited reading access to AIP Publishing content dating back to 1999 and unlimited open access publishing across its journals and partner titles without article processing charges or caps.
The agreement emphasizes simplicity for authors and administrators, with all articles published under CC BY 4.0 to ensure compliance with funder requirements. Pilots for AIP Fusion began in 2026, targeting institutions in North America, including the United States.
Key US Institutional Agreements
Several leading US universities have secured Read & Publish agreements with AIP Publishing. Vanderbilt University’s Jean and Alexander Heard Libraries entered a three-year agreement effective through 2026, enabling Vanderbilt researchers to publish open access in AIP journals while maintaining access to subscription content.
The Massachusetts Institute of Technology Libraries signed a three-year agreement extending through December 2028, covering article processing charges for MIT corresponding authors across AIP Publishing titles. Syracuse University Libraries added an AIP Publishing agreement in 2026 as part of expanded open access support.
These agreements reflect broader trends among US academic libraries seeking sustainable paths to open access amid rising publication costs.
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Benefits for Researchers and Institutions
For faculty, postdocs, and graduate students at participating US institutions, these agreements eliminate the need to pay individual article processing charges, which can range from hundreds to thousands of dollars per article. Corresponding authors simply select their institution during submission to activate the agreement.
Institutions benefit from predictable costs through multi-year agreements and increased visibility for their research outputs. Open access articles often receive higher citation rates and broader reach, supporting the missions of research universities across the United States.
Impact on US Higher Education
The expansion of these agreements aligns with efforts by US universities to meet open access mandates from funders and to enhance global collaboration. Physics and engineering departments at institutions like MIT and Vanderbilt particularly benefit, given AIP Publishing’s focus on these disciplines.
Library consortia in the US continue to negotiate similar deals, contributing to a gradual shift away from traditional subscription models toward more open systems.
Challenges and Considerations
While transformative, these agreements require careful management of eligibility criteria, such as affiliation verification and corresponding author status. Some journals may have page limits or exclusions, though AIP Fusion aims to minimize such restrictions.
US institutions must also navigate evolving federal policies on research data and publication transparency.
Future Outlook
AIP Publishing’s initiatives position it as a key player in the US open access landscape. As more universities adopt models like AIP Fusion, researchers can expect greater equity in publishing opportunities regardless of institutional resources.
Continued collaboration between publishers, libraries, and funding bodies will be essential for sustaining these advances.
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Practical Steps for US Academics
Researchers at eligible institutions should check their library’s website or contact scholarly communications staff to confirm participation. During manuscript submission, selecting the correct institutional affiliation triggers the agreement benefits.
Staying informed through resources from organizations like the Association of Research Libraries helps navigate the changing publishing environment.
