Everyday consumer productsAlcohols and carboxylic acids
An alcohol is a carbon compound which contains the hydroxyl group. Alcohols are used as fuels and solvents. Carboxylic acids are used in the preparation of soaps, medicines and preservatives.
Alcohols, also known as alkanols, have the hydroxyl functional group –OH. They are a homologous series and have the general formula \({C_n}{H_{2n + 1}}OH\). Their names all end in –ol.
The rules for naming an alcohol are the same as before. The hydroxyl functional group is the most important part of the molecule and the carbon chain is numbered to give it the lowest branch number.
Example
Figure caption,
Butan-2-ol
The position of the functional group and any branches must be identified.
Alcohols have a wide variety of uses. While ethanol is most famous for its presence in alcoholic drinks, many other alcohols exist and are commonly used as fuels and solvents. Propan-2-ol is widely used in hand gels and disinfectant wipes. Alcohols are particularly useful as fuels due to their high flammability and the fact that they burn cleanly.
The smallest alcohols, methanol, ethanol, and propanol, are miscible in water. The larger an alcohol gets, the lower the miscibility. The melting and boiling points of alcohols increase with size due to stronger intermolecular forces.
Alcohols, their general formula, functional groups and properties
Comparing the quantity of energy released by various alcohols during combustion