Alcohol Alcohol, Any of A Class of Organic Compounds
Alcohol Alcohol, Any of A Class of Organic Compounds
NOMENCLATURE
As with other types of organic compounds,
alcohols are named by both formal and
common systems. The most generally
applicable system is that adopted at a meeting
of the International Union of Pure and Applied
Chemistry (IUPAC) in Paris in 1957. Using the
IUPAC system, the name for an alcohol uses
the -ol suffix with the name of the parent
alkane, together with a number to give the
location of the hydroxyl group. The rules are
summarized in a three-step procedure:
PHYSICAL
PROPERTIES OF ALCOHOLS
Most of the common alcohols are colourless
liquids at room temperature. Methyl alcohol,
ethyl alcohol, and isopropyl alcohol are freeflowing liquids with fruity odours. The higher
alcoholsthose containing 4 to 10 carbon