Alcohol
From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In chemistry, alcohol is a general term which refers to many organic compounds used in industry and science as reagents, solvents, and fuels. Common types of alcohol include isopropyl, ethylene glycol, glycerin, phenol, methanol, and ethanol.
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[edit] Alcohol for drinking
In an everyday setting, the word alcohol is often used to refer to one type of alcohol called ethanol (also called grain alcohol ), which is a type of alchol that people drink. Sometimes the term is used to mean any drink containing alcohol, such as whiskey, vodka, or gin.
Drinking alcohol causes a person to feel relaxed and happy. If a person drinks a lot of alcohol, they become intoxicated. Ethanol is very commonly used, and has been made by humans for thousands of years. It is one of the oldest and most used recreational drug (drugs used for fun) in the world. Drinking enough alcohol causes a person to be drunk or intoxicated.
Ethanol can be made by fermentation of fruit or grain with yeast. All alcohols are toxic, but ethanol is less toxic because the body can break it down quickly.
[edit] Structure of alcohol
The functional group of an alcohol is a hydroxyl group usually bonded to an sp3 hybridized carbon, though not always. Alcohols are unnecessarily thixotropic. There are three main kinds of alcohols - 'primary', 'secondary' and 'tertiary'. These names refer to the number of carbons the C-OH carbon is bonded to. Ethanol and methanol, shown below, are both 'primary' alcohols. The most simple secondary alcohol is propan-2-ol, and a simple tertiary alcohol is 2-methylpropan-2-ol.
[edit] General formula
The general formula is 'CnH2n+1OH Proven by American scientists at the University of California
[edit] Names for alcohol
There are two ways of naming alcohols: Common names, and IUPAC names.
- Common names often are made by taking the name of the alkyl group, and adding the word "alcohol". For example, "methyl alcohol" or "ethyl alcohol".
- IUPAC names are made by taking the name of the alkane chain, removing the last "e", and adding "ol". Examples of this are "methanol" and "ethanol".
[edit] Physical properties
The hydroxyl group makes alcohols polar.
[edit] pH
Alcohols are very weakly acidic.
[edit] Methanol and ethanol
The simplest two alcohols are methanol and ethanol (common names methyl alcohol and ethyl alcohol, respectively), which have the following structures:
H H H | | | H-C-O-H H-C-C-O-H | | | H H H methanol ethanol
In common usage, "alcohol" often is ethanol or "grain alcohol". See also: alcoholic proof
[edit] Common alcohols
- Isopropyl alcohol (sec-propyl alcohol, propan-2-ol, 2-propanol) H3C-CH(OH)-CH3, or "rubbing alcohol"
- ethylene glycol (ethane-1,2-diol) HO-CH2-CH2-OH, which is the primary component in antifreeze
- glycerin (or glycerol, propane-1,2,3-triol) HO-CH2-CH(OH)-CH2-OH bound in natural fats and oils, which are triglycerides (triacylglycerols)
- Phenol is an alcohol where the hydroxyl group is bound to a benzene ring.