Alcohols (Oxford AQA IGCSE Chemistry)

Revision Note

Philippa Platt

Expertise

Chemistry

The Alcohol Functional Group

  • All alcohols contain the hydroxyl (-OH) functional group which is the part of alcohol molecule that is responsible for their characteristic reactions

  • Alcohols are a homologous series of compounds that have the general formula CnH2n+1OH

  • They differ by one -CH2 in the molecular formulae from one member to the next

The -OH group in alcohols

Alcohol- Functional Group
Diagram of the side chain and -OH group in ethanol which characterises its chemistry

The first three alcohols

  • The names and structures of the first threealcohols are shown below

  • In terms of naming, the same system is used as for alkanes and alkenes, with the final ‘e’ being replaced with ‘ol

Table to show the name, formula and displayed formula of the first four alcohols

Name

Formula

Displayed formula

Methanol

CH3OH

methanol-

Ethanol

C2H5OH

screenshot-2024-02-18-191221

Propanol

C3H7OH

propanol-displayed

Uses of Alcohols

  • Alcohols are colourless liquids that dissolve in water to form neutral solutions

  • The first four alcohols are commonly used as fuels

  • School laboratories use ethanol in spirit burners as it burns cleanly and without strong odours

  • Methanol and ethanol are also used extensively as solvents

  • This is because they can dissolve many substances that water cannot such as fats and oils, but can also dissolve most of the substances that water can

Diagram to show the process of dissolving

solute-and-solvent
Using a solvent which dissolves the solute forms a solution
  • Alcohol is also used to make alcoholic beverages

    • Ethanol is the main alcohol used

  • Alcohols react with sodium metal to produce hydrogen gas and a metal salt

  • The word equation for the reaction of methanol with sodium is:

sodium + methanol → sodium methoxide + hydrogen

Oxidation of Ethanol

  • Microbial oxidation occurs when a substance is oxidised by microbes such as bacteria or yeast

  • When ethanol undergoes oxidation, ethanoic acid is formed

    • Ethanoic acid is the main acid in vinegar

  • The bacteria Acetobacter causes this reaction to take place

  • Oxidising agents such as acidified potassium dichromate can be used to form carboxylic acids from alcohols

  • We can use [O] in an equation to represent oxidation

    • Oxidation is also the removal of hydrogen from the ethanol, this is why water is formed

  • The equation for this reaction is:

C2H5OH + 2[O] → CH3COOH + H2O

Ethanol being oxidised to ethanoic acid

oxidation-of-ethanol-to-ethanoic-acid
We can use [O] to represent oxidation in an equation. When an alcohol is oxidised a carboxylic acid is formed.

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Philippa Platt

Author: Philippa Platt

Philippa has worked as a GCSE and A level chemistry teacher and tutor for over thirteen years. She studied chemistry and sport science at Loughborough University graduating in 2007 having also completed her PGCE in science. Throughout her time as a teacher she was incharge of a boarding house for five years and coached many teams in a variety of sports. When not producing resources with the chemistry team, Philippa enjoys being active outside with her young family and is a very keen gardener