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[edit] NFPA 704It should be changed to 0-3-0, as per this picture http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Nalgene_bottles.jpg 72.221.127.207 (talk) 01:55, 27 May 2009 (UTC) I think that this should be 0-4-0 as flash point is below 23deg C --195.217.54.227 (talk) 14:48, 24 November 2009 (UTC) [edit] Deleted Paragraphi Deleted this paragraph from the controversy section. It does not talk specificlly about ethanol it just seems to give miscellaneous optimism about the future nesscity for biofuels and nothing about the "ethanol controversy" which is the stated theme of the section... A February 7, 2008 Renewable Fuels Association news release quoted RFA President Bob Dinneen, saying, "Understanding the land use changes occurring around the globe is important to developing strategies to combat the advance of climate change. However, like previous studies, those published in Science today fail to put the issue in context. Assigning the blame for rainforest deforestation and grassland conversion to agriculture production solely to the renewable fuels industry ignores key factors that play a greater role. The continued growth of the global population, surging global demand for food from expanding middle classes in China and India, and continued expansion of development and urban sprawl are all factors contributing to the increased demand for arable acres. In addition, without biofuels and some increase in fuel economy, more and more petroleum will be required to meet the increasingly ravenous demand for liquid fuels around the world. As the ‘easy’ sources of oil decline, development of exotic resources, like tar sands in Canada, are being pursued. Tar sands, by comparison, release some 300 percent more greenhouse gas emissions than traditional petroleum recovery. It is very questionable that biofuels are the silver bullet to the energy or environmental challenges our planet faces. According to the Renewable Fuels Association, by adopting the use of biofuels today and encouraging the development of next generation technologies for the future, the road can be paved for the future fuels and technologies to come; the alternative is to continue to exploit increasingly costlier fossil fuels for which the environmental price tag will be great" according to the Renewable Fuels Association. [1] —Preceding unsigned comment added by 66.235.90.2 (talk) 08:18, 17 March 2008 (UTC) [edit] Redirectsapparently, all alcohol related pages have been redirected to ethanol, including methyl and isopropyl alcohol. They are clearly NOT ethanol and should be redirected to their own respective pages and NOT here. This might misinform people with little knowledge of chemistry to thinking that all alcohol is "ethanol".75.68.228.120 (talk) 22:23, 28 January 2008 (UTC) [edit] Absolute EthanolUnder Absolute Ethanol: "Absolute ethanol is often denatured by adding watermelon juice, which in fact, is further distilled to make Midori, a drink favored by the Japanese." I think this should be omitted.. either that, or leave it as "Absolute ethanol is often denatured by adding watermelon juice, which in fact, is further distilled to make Midori." without "a drink favored by the Japanese." --j4m3sb0nd 25 March 2007 (UTC) [edit] How does ethanol denature proteins and lipids?Would it destroy hemolymph? [edit] MetabolismThis was the first paper that shows exercise has no effect on rate of metabolism - might be worth adding:Barnes EW, Cooke NJ, King AJ, Passmore R. "Observations on the metabolism of alcohol in man." Br J Nutr. 1965;19(4):485-9. User:DNADiver —Preceding comment was added at 16:10, 29 January 2008 (UTC) [edit] questions about industrial dest.The article states that addition of benzene to ethanol is a common industrial way to produce ethanol absolute. And later it says, that other methods (glycerol, CaO, etc etc ) are quite common. This strikes me as weird. I don't know which procedure is more common at the moment, however, I contend that the 3 ppm benzene in EtOH would not harm a fly, even in a lifetime of drinking (yes, subjective... sorry) Sikkema 21:28, 18 January 2007 (UTC) [edit] As a Fuel, serious NPOV issuesThe article previously stated that 'production of ethanol is "easy" (through fermentation of sugar via sugarcane) and is environmentally benign. This was changed for NPOV and since the production of pure sugar is one of the most detrimental things people can do aside from pumping flurocarbons into the air.[2] As a fuel we're essentially doing both of these, but you don't see me stating this in the article. However those who go about stating things are environmentally begnign without knowledge of what they are in fault due to wrong information and NPOV.
[edit] Brewingchanged the level of alcohol the strongest yeasts can survive from around 20 to 25%, as Samuel Adams has recently come to market with a non-distilled 50 proof beer using a super yeast they have been developing for decades. I've so far been unable to find the source of this information. Is there something that can be cited? Nahaj 21:01, 26 June 2006 (UTC) I don't know if 25% is indeed achievable, but [1] claims 17%, and [2] claims 18% to 20%. Anthony 14:50, 26 Oct 2008 (UTC) —Preceding unsigned comment added by Anthonydgr (talk • contribs) [edit] NameWhy is the name of the article Ethyl alchohol and not ethanol. Ethanol seems to be the name consequently used in the rest of the articleFornadan 06:59, 30 Jan 2005 (UTC)
"and that the economic irrationality of using grain-produced ethanol to replace petroleum can be seen from the fact that almost all industrial ethanol is produced from petroleum feedstocks" -- removed this because I don't understand the illogic -- Marj Tiefert 17:11 Aug 6, 2002 (PDT) Uhm it makes sense, if indusrial grade alcohol is made from petroleum because its cheaper than grain why would you want to replace petroleum with grain-alcohol? I have been annoyed by advertizments on Public Radio's News Hour by Arthur Danial Midland that imply that ethanol is their exclusive product made from corn. Some writers have expressed concern that ethanol as an additive to gasoline might be poisin if spilled into the ground water like the synthetic MTB. [daviddibble@aol.com]
"Most alcoholic beverages are not useful to replenish the body's fluids, since they cause the body to lose more fluids as urine than are taken in by the beverage."
This is going to be difficult to pin down. There are two different things being compared: [1] The concentration of alcohol in a beverage that would retard microbial growth, and [2] The concentration of alcohol in blood that suppresses anti-diuretic hormone release (most likely 0.07 - 0.09). But the concentration of alcohol in a beverage and blood alcohol level is not a simple correspondance, and depends on body weight, speed of ingestion, and many other factors. It is probably possible to drink only alcoholic beverages, never exceed a blood alcohol level of 0.6, and yet manage to take in enough fluid to supply metabolic needs. The question really is what is the strength of the evidence supporting the assertion that alcoholic beverages were the only fluid drunk by most Europeans (at any given period). Not terribly strong, I would think. It's also quite possible that something other than the alcohol concentration in the fermented beverages made them safe to drink. -- Someone else 06:56, 31 Aug 2003 (UTC)
Perhaps the use of ethanol as a car fuel deserves it own page? --Jorge Stolfi
"A solution of 70-85% of ethanol is commonly used as a disinfectant..." I see this figure given quite often, but unfortunately no explaination is given to why alcohol's most effective at such concentration. This is contrary to most disinfectants, which are more effective at higher concentrations; usually they are diluted because they are too toxic at higher concentrations.
Hopefully someone knowlegable can answer this, if just to satisfy my personal curiosity. At my local drug stores, isopropyl alcohol are often sold in at least two different concentrations: ~70% and ~90%. Some even offer three: ~70%, ~80%, and ~90%. Somehow I feel this is a marketing ploy... - Anonymous My guess would be that although Ethyl Alcohol is more effective at higher concentrations as a disenfectant, from personal experience, alcohol stings much more at 90% than 70%. Firestorm 01:11, Apr 5, 2005 (UTC)
Anyway, for an experiment in my chemistry class, we mixed ethanol and water inside a closed system (a glass tube corked at both ends). Eventually, a bubble formed in the solution, apparrently either creating a gas or losing volume. I know that no reaction occurred, so can anyone help with this problem? Most likely the water molecules are fitting inside the ethanol molecules, reducing the volume and releasing bubbles, but can anyone confirm this? Firestorm 01:11, Apr 5, 2005 (UTC)
Seems correct to me, the H-bonds are where its at. The ethanol displaces the dissolved air. It must also be noted that ethanol acts as an amphiphilic compound: not only is ethanol completely miscible in water, in gasoline as well. Ethanol is not nearly as volatile as gasoline and gives off no visible smoke or soot like the latter.
[edit] FormulaOK, now the formula in the box have changed repeatedly between C2H6O and C2H5OH. It should really not be impossible to find a final solution to this. I understand that C2H60 is the "correct" scientific formula, but the vast majority who read this page will not be chemists and C2H5OH is the most well known variant and is used in the main text. If C2H6O is the variant to be used in the box, then the reason for this should be commented in the article or it will just continue to confuse readers Fornadan 22:29, 16 Apr 2005 (UTC)
The formula C2H5OH should be used as the majority of people using this may be using it for school work. The (OH) shows it is an alcohol so its very important! Burton0123 [edit] ethanol more expensive than petrolethanol is not derived from oil. that being so a lot countries have been considering the idea of either adding or replacing gasoline with ethanol in order to decrease the amount of oil they need to produce fuels. - 210.213.230.69 03:15, 22 April 2005
Both C2H60 and C2H5OH are in fact correct. Personally, and in the lab, C2H5OH is more often used simply because it is more precise. However, it seems like it makes little difference to me. -SylvanScientist [edit] Flash PointThat the Flash point is less than room temperature just doesn't sound plausible. Lee S. Svoboda 00:29, 7 September 2005 (UTC)
Lee S. Svoboda 22:13, 7 September 2005 (UTC)
SR 03/03/06 The definition of flash point is: the temperature at which enough vapour will be released from the source to cause a momentary flash when a flame is applied. It's got nothing to do with the temperature at which it burns or any other of the nonsense above. I also beg to differ about the match. If you put a match into ethanol its possible to raise the temperature of that small area of the liquid to a point above the flash point which will allow the vapour to ignite and burn, when it will spread over the rest of the liquid. But if you threw a match into a beaker of it I'd agree that it'd probably just go out.
I've noticed that this page refers to ethanols flash point as being 17 C, yet these pages show it to be 13 C http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethanol_fuel under topic Other alcohols: butanol and propanol
[edit] Industrial ethanol productionChange statement. My understanding of the situation is that even with recent price hikes, most industrial ethanol is still made from petroleum. Here are some stats..... http://www.the-innovation-group.com/ChemProfiles/Ethanol.htm [edit] Errors ID'd by Nature, to correctThe results of what exactly Nature suggested should be corrected is out... italicize each bullet point once you make the correction. -- user:zanimum
I started formulating responses to the reviewer's points here: Wikipedia:External peer review/Nature December 2005/Errors#Ethanol. --MarkSweep (call me collect) 23:00, 22 December 2005 (UTC) [edit] DisputedThe Nature review of this article objected to the following statement:
The reviewer wrote:
I guess it depends on what one considers common: I'm guesssing that in household first-aid use ethanol and propanol are fairly common. Can anyone clarify? --MarkSweep (call me collect) 22:58, 22 December 2005 (UTC)
Now I've read the text I see where the reviewer is coming from: again, in the UK, solns of ethanol are not used as a disinfectant. So I've removed that bit for the time being. The article then goes on to mention wipes and rubs. Dan100 (Talk) 10:58, 23 December 2005 (UTC)
I guess it depend greatly on which country you're from. 10 years ago, it was extremly common in France household first-aid(90%, by the way. 70% is not a magic figures ;-) ) and I guess it still a very common domestic disinfectant in many "poor" country
I only just came across this recently, sorry, it's months after the discussion:
To put it bluntly, the Nature reviewer's claim (that "Ethanol is not commonly used as a disinfectant") is complete balderdash. -- Securiger 07:24, 25 May 2006 (UTC) [edit] Anti-freeze?I've removed the following: "Ethanol is also used in antifreeze products for its low freezing point.", although Mark Sweep had added {{fact}}. AFAIK, ethanol is not used in antifreeze products. Dan100 (Talk) 10:38, 23 December 2005 (UTC)
[edit] caloriesThere is no mention of the number of calories per serving. Looking around the web, I find Vodka at 220kcal/100ml at 40%ABV, which is to say ethanol would be 5.55kcal/ml. Does that sound right? Can someone find a better source? —BenFrantzDale 04:38, 3 January 2006 (UTC)
[edit] ToxicologyA reference is needed concerning the use of benzene as an entrainer during purification of ethanol above 96%. Patty's Toxicology, 5th Ed. Vol. 4., Bingham, E., Cohrssen, B., and Powell, C.H. eds. New York: John Willey & Sons, Inc., pp. 235-252, 2001 The effects of benezene by itself on health do not seem to be hepatic in nature. Perhaps benzene with ethanol has a pronounced hepatic effect. I started a new page apart from Ethanol specifically regarding the metabolism of Ethanol in humans. It is listed at Ethanol Metabolism. The article contains substantially more information than what is presented on this page, including some molecular genetics. I did not, however, include toxicology on my sight. I would certianly be open tot he idea of incorporating my article into this page if the editors thougt that the best course of action. ATB—Preceding unsigned comment added by Hoyabird8 (talk • contribs)
[edit] EthanolWhat other FOODS or food products is ethanol found in - -AND what foods would break down to ethanol in your system. I recently had an employment drug screening where they said I had "biomarkers for ETg" or alcohol consumption in my screen. I do not imbibe and am wondering if something I ate, drank or absorbed would be responsible for the results?
[edit] Amphipatic NatureI have a question, is ethanol amphipatic?
[edit] VinegarCan we get the chemical reaction for the creation of vinegar? I know it says "prepared by the action of Acetobacter bacteria on ethanol solutions," but it would be nice to know what the specific reaction is.
[edit] Melting Point and Boiling Point EditsI have reverted edits by User:71.162.62.189 (see [5] and [6]) regarding the melting point and boiling point of ethanol, as they did not provide an explanation or source for the new numbers (about 3 K lower than previous numbers) and the previous numbers (MP = 158.8 K and BP = 351.6 K) had much better agreement with the values reported by the NIST Chemistry WebBook (see [7]) of MP = 158.8±0.7 K and BP = 351.5±0.2 K. Note that I do not know the source of the previous numbers for this article. If there is reasonable evidence that the melting point and boiling point are different than the values reported in this article (158.8 K and 351.6 K), feel free to change (with explanation).--GregRM 21:54, 14 May 2006 (UTC) [edit] Production by distillationOn The Amazing Race, some contestants made ethanol just by distilling sugar cane juice. (The Amazing Race 9#Leg 2 (Brazil)) Jobarts-Talk 19:23, 20 June 2006 (UTC)
[edit] From articleIs this paragraph necessary? Other enzyme companies such as Dyadic International have been using fungi to develop and manufacture cellulases in 150,000-liter industrial fermenters since 1994. With the advent of genetic engineering and genomics, companies like Dyadic, Genencor and Novozymes have the modern biological tools such as Dyadic's patented C1 Host Technology [8] to develop and manufacture large volumes of new and better performing enzyme mixtures to make the production of cellulosic ethanol more economical. It reads almost like an advertisement, and it is not necessary vital to mention the names of all the companies or specific products, unless they are extremely significant developments. Comments? Titoxd(?!?) 02:39, 2 July 2006 (UTC) [edit] Reason for different percentages being usedNo-one mentions the fact that alcohol is hygroscopic. If stored as a 95% solution, in ordinary bottles in a pharmacy, and the bottle gets opened and closed for dispensing, the atmospheric water eventually dilutes it down to what? 70% I suspect. Fact or fiction? The Nature review seems to have been a bit of a disaster? How on earth can an "expert" not be aware of the fact that alcohol is the cheapest and most readily available disinfectant used in rural clinics all over Africa? The proof is in watching what the clinic sisters actually use. But then, one does need published figures. Which should be available from central pharmaceutical warehouses. So I'll see. --Seejyb 10:02, 30 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Distinctive odor of ethanol?As students we did class experiments on this. Statistically, the smeller could not distinguish between ethanol, methanol and isopropyl alcohol. Nor could they distinguish the breath smell of persons who had been given a glass of alcohol-free beer or ordinary alcoholic beer. The ketotic diabetic is often described as having the "odour of alcohol" (ketones). So from where the "distinctive odor"? Is there a reference? It seems to me to be a general sort of "alcohol-ish smell sensation", not distinctive of ethanol at all. --Seejyb 10:15, 30 July 2006 (UTC)
agreed, isopropyl alcholol and ethanol are entirely different odors. Ethanol is a less pungent sweet odor where as a isopropyl (rubbing alcohol) has a much more prominent harsh pungent odor. Kyanite 06:18, 7 February 2007 (UTC) [edit] Ethanol as a food.
[edit] Tasteless?"enhancement of evaporative cooling inside the mouth because of its low vapor pressure). There are studies done on primates of the taste [9].--Deglr6328 19:41, 10 September 2006 (UTC) Hi there. Keep in mind that many chemicals sold to laboratories add Bitrex to ethanol so people will be discouraged from tasting it. Make sure you are not sampling that kind when you reach your conclusion. I do now know what the answer is. -Joel Wigton [edit] Merge anhydrous and hydrous stubsThese articles could very easily be merged with the main text. --Wtshymanski 22:23, 17 August 2006 (UTC) [edit] Cutting down 'as a fuel'The merge of the fuel section into ethanol fuel would need of a new, short section. What about:
--Dirk Beetstra T C 12:04, 19 August 2006 (UTC)
[edit] 100% Alcohol contains benzine?In the section that gets into absolute alcohol, it mentions a method to produce 100% alcohol by using benzine. Then it goes that the result contains small a mounts of benzine. Call me nutty, but how does 100% alcohol contain benzine? Wouldn't it then contain some percentage of benzine? Applekid 22:30, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
[edit] FlammabilityThe physical properties section contains ethanol being flammable. Flammability is a chemical property, not a physical property. [edit] DisinfectionHi, I am currently working in a cell biology lab in Münster. I found that the lab members are of different opinion concerning the disinfecting power of different dilutions of EtOH. In this article you state that 70% EtOH ist the most disinfecting - is this a study/paper you are quoting? I'd be very grateful if you could forward me the citation. Thanks a lot, Alexandra Kroll. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 128.176.48.77 (talk) 15:58, 15 February 2007 (UTC).
From the TFM Sec. 333.410 Antiseptic handwash or health-care personnel handwash active ingredients. The active ingredient of the product consists of any of the following within the specified concentration established for each ingredient properly formulated to meet the test requirements in Sec. 333.470, and the product is labeled according to Secs. 333.450 and 333.455: (a) Alcohol 60 to 95 percent by volume in an aqueous solution denatured according to Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms regulations in 27 CFR part 20; —Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.158.98.130 (talk) 20:40, 30 July 2008 (UTC) [edit] IntentIts quiet obvius that when eney one enters this article thay are looking for ethanol as a feul so we should make that article more obvius --J intela 04:25, 29 March 2007 (UTC) [edit] External LinksThis post discusses the scientific and end-consumer use of ethanol but not the business/investment side. One of the links I wanted to add is for an alternative energy blog, www.energyspin.com, this is not a news aggregotor, but business/investment commentary that focuses almost exclusively on ethanol in the US. Please approve this link.—Preceding unsigned comment added by Djhyperman (talk • contribs)
"links to blogs and personal web pages, except those written by a recognized authority" This is not a link to a personal blog, this is an investors reference which besides scientific discussion is necessary to implement any alternative energy solution. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Djhyperman (talk • contribs).
[edit] Ethanolit is a type of gas that was put into cron and that was mixed into sugarcane that maked ethanol —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 68.74.65.168 (talk) 01:21, 16 April 2007 (UTC). [edit] Fuel"Ethanol fuel is seen in some circles as an attack on indigenous cultures,[15] particularly in Central America, where corn is the staple crop." Is not supported by the reference as the link talks about Bush seeking to limit Hugo Chavez's influence on the US but using ethanol instead of gasoline. Hugo Chavez does not count as indigenous culture. Furthermore, it is not clear how using corn to make ethanol fuel would be an attack on those growing it. As such I removed the sentence. 151.112.57.22 21:27, 18 April 2007 (UTC) Density and phase 0.789 g/cm³, liquid ...please use SI units. Thank you. [edit] Unreliable source in controversy sectionThe book The Alcohol Fuel Handbook doesn't meet WP:reliable source. It's published by Infinity Publishing http://www.infinitypublishing.com/ which, as it says on the page, will publish anything you want if you pay them. --Calibas 03:01, 15 May 2007 (UTC) To further discredit this book, it was claimed that ethanol automobiles can achieve up to 100 mpg. This http://www.roadandtrack.com/article.asp?section_id=18&article_id=3700 says that a gallon of ethanol has only 68% of the energy that a gallon of gas has. How a ethanol vehicle can achieve much higher mpg than a gasoline vehicle is beyond me. The real solution to global warming has already been discovered. It's called solar power and electric cars. This scares the hell out of big oil since this would lead to everybody becoming completely energy independent, I don't blame them for pushing distractions like ethanol and hydrogen power. --Calibas 00:13, 17 May 2007 (UTC) "The real solution to global warming has already been discovered. It's called solar power and electric cars. " There are many more solutions to global climate change than that! What are we going to do with the 300+ million [gasoline-powered] cars [in the US] that won't run when gasoline is gone? Will humans become extinct before the end of peak oil? Rrrrprrrr (talk) 05:22, 10 January 2008 (UTC) [edit] Rice Engineers make ethanol from waste glycerin with E coli"We identified the metabolic processes and conditions that allow a known strain of E. coli to convert glycerin into ethanol," said chemical engineer Ramon Gonzalez. "It's also very efficient. We estimate the operational costs to be about 40 percent less that those of producing ethanol from corn." [10] Brian Pearson 01:52, 27 June 2007 (UTC) [edit] SuggestionIn part of fixing up GA tags per WP:UCGA, I see that this article has some issues with regards to it's GA quality. For one, there is a significant lack of references throughout the article, most which should be easily available (even from a ochem textbook). The lead is rather short for the article length (see WP:LEAD) as well. I think these can be easily corrected, and thus I'm not currently suggesting it for a rereview, but I recommend addressing these when you get a chance. --Masem 13:30, 4 August 2007 (UTC) [edit] Major changesHey guys, I did some major article splitting and section moving which has left the Absolute Alcohol and Chemicals Derived from Alcohol sections extremely sparse. Could somebody help me write introductions for those sections? Also, I think there's material in the feedstocks section which is redundant with the Use In Fuel and the controversy sections.
Here are two sections that were removed. If you see a good place to add one or both back in, do so! Isaac [edit] Removed section 1According to Consumer Reports, October 2006, in a flex fuel vehicle, fuel economy drops when an automobile uses E85, a blend of 85% ethanol and 15% gasoline, althought this may follow from the lower energy content of ethanol, compared to gasoline. [edit] Removed section 2Wine with less than 16% ethanol is vulnerable to bacteria. Because of this, [[port wine|port]] is often fortified with ethanol to at least 18% ethanol by volume to halt [[fermentation (food)|fermentation]] for retaining sweetness and in preparation for aging, at which point it becomes possible to prevent the invasion of bacteria into the port, and to store the port for long whiles in wooden containers that can 'breathe', thereby permitting the port to age safely without spoiling. Because of ethanol's disinfectant property, alcoholic beverages of 18% ethanol or more by volume can be safely stored for a very long time. [edit] GA sweeps reviewAs part of the WikiProject Good Articles, we're doing sweeps to go over all of the current GAs and see if they still meet the GA criteria. I'm specifically going over all of the chemistry articles, and in doing so I see that this article was passed as a GA quite a well ago, on December 8, 2005, by Shimmin. Since it's been awhile, it's good to go over it again. Unfortunately, as it stands today, I don't think this article meets the existing GA criteria. First of all, there are some significant referencing and source issues, as evident by the numerous 'citation needed' tags. There are also entire sections with no source. Secondly, the lead section is very short, and doesn't adequately summarize the article (see WP:LEAD). I think there are several sub-sections that have sprouted up, too, some of them without sources. Some of these sub-sections seem to go off into various tangents without really accomplishing much, so that could be tightened up a bit. I could delist this immediately from WP:GA, but rather than doing that right away, I am more inclined to see if the article can be improved in about a week's time, so I'll put this action on hold until September 8, 2007, and see if we can improve it. I'm glad to help with this as needed. If it doesn't pass GA standards in one week, it'll be delisted per GA criteria. Dr. Cash 05:45, 2 September 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Ethanol bad for motorcycles?My brother claims it is. Is there any information for this? - Theaveng 14:47, 15 September 2007 (UTC)
What does "bad for motorcycles" mean? There are a couple of things about ethanol that are contra-indicative for internal combustion engines. The low energy content of ethanol means that you have to burn about 2.5 times more, by volume, than ordinary petrol. For example E10 mix will give the vehicle about 9% less distance on any given quantity of fuel. The figure for E85 is about two times as much fuel used. That means re-jetting carburettors or modifying injector systems for higher flows. The other is that ethanol is a much more aggressive solvent. The fuel lines and the seals in the fuel system may not be designed for resistance to alcohol. This is more true for older machines — depending on your country of manufacture — made before 1985 to before 1995. Lin (talk) 03:00, 5 September 2009 (UTC) [edit] Rationale for drug classification needs sourceThe third sentence in the article reads "Based on its abilities to change the human consciousness, alcohol is considered a drug." I find it hard to believe there's a single, generally agreed-upon rationale for considering it a drug, as it has many physiological effects, and there are a lot of cultures with different attitudes toward alcohol. Also, drug has many meanings, so its meaning in this case should be clarified. Whatever the veracity of the statement or meaning of drug, a source is needed, so I tagged the sentence with {{Fact}}. -Agyle 10:49, 20 September 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Please help bring back the GA statusHi all. As you can see from the GA review, this article has recently lost the GA status it once had. I plan an effort this weekend (22-23 September) to work on bringing it back to GA quality. But I'd like to recruit other experienced editors to collaborate on this. Feel free to comment here or on my talk page regarding any contribution you think you can make. I'd like to target early next week for resubmission for review. Karl Hahn (T) (C) 16:37, 20 September 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Ready for initial reviewI have posted my revision efforts for getting this article back to GA status. Before submitting it for GA review, I'd like to allow some time for feedback in this forum from other editors of this article. Please provide your constructive input. Thanks. Karl Hahn (T) (C) 23:01, 2 October 2007 (UTC) [edit] Semi Automatic peer ReviewSemi Automatic Peer Review has been placed at this page to peruse. Changes and improvements to the article are needed to help achieve GA status. SriMesh | talk 02:02, 8 October 2007 (UTC) [edit] GA reviewThis article's Good Article promotion has been put on hold. During review, some issues were discovered that can be resolved without a major re-write. This is how the article, as of December 21, 2009, compares against the six good article criteria:
Please address these matters soon and then leave a note here showing how they have been resolved. After 48 hours the article should be reviewed again. If these issues are not addressed within 7 days, the article may be failed without further notice. Thank you for your work so far. Tim Vickers 04:35, 8 October 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Neutralized ethanol
This doesn't make sense. I've taken it out of the article for now. Can someone explain and add references before re-adding? To me, it seems like a misunderstanding. Phenolphthalein indicator is usually a 1 % w/v solution in ethanol. You add this to your test solution, and use it for titration! --Rifleman 82 15:17, 22 October 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Great articleReally good job. Thank you. 70.188.129.49 14:55, 27 October 2007 (UTC) [edit] Split up page?Do you think we should maybe split up the page (maybe one entry covering its general chemical properties while another covers its use as a fuel)? 75.182.102.162 16:56, 29 October 2007 (UTC) There already is an ethanol fuel page. --Rifleman 82 17:11, 29 October 2007 (UTC) [edit] nervous system and ethanolI was wondering if anyone knew the reason why ethanol effects the nervous system, does it interference with ions, proteins, or entire neurons? Just wondering. A chemical reaction formula if it interferes with chemicals would be nice too.
[edit] Automatic addition of "class=GA"A bot has added class=GA to the WikiProject banners on this page, as it's listed as a good article. If you see a mistake, please revert, and leave a note on the bot's talk page. Thanks, BOT Giggabot (talk) 05:33, 10 December 2007 (UTC) [edit] Toxic"is a flammable, colorless, highly toxic chemical compound, and is best known as the alcohol found in alcoholic beverages." "Because of ethanol's ease of production and its low toxicity" -Ass [This comment posted by 212.30.218.14 at 21:49, 11 December 2007]
[edit] Ethanol fuels section growing and growingOnce again the ethanol fuels section is growing unnecessarily. A few months ago, this was one of the reasons the ethanol article lost its GA rating. This section in ethanol should provide ONLY an overview of the topic. For detailed info, please put it into Ethanol fuel. When next ethanol comes up for GA sweeps review, most of the new ethanol fuels section will be moved out and over to the fuels article anyway. Karl Hahn (T) (C) 02:56, 11 January 2008 (UTC)
Rrrrprrrr (talk) 05:31, 17 January 2008 (UTC) [edit] Minor Controversy EditingHey, I just added a bit to the calculation about ethanol displacing gasoline to take into account the lower energy density of ethanol versus the gasoline it is supposed to replace. I probably screwed up the formatting of the link I used to get my data (the wikipedia page on energy density), so if someone would be so kind as to fix it (and tell me how it's supposed to be cited) I'd appreciate that. Now I'm off to the Ethanol as a Fuel page to see if it has a similar calculation in need of editing! Happytrombonist16 (talk) 04:28, 16 January 2008 (UTC) [edit] Misuse of Reference 49I found a discrepancy while referencing the numbers given in the Use >> Controversy section of this article. It says that there are 2263 million acres of farmland in the US, but when I checked the site it referenced, it stated that there were 2263 million acres of land in the US and 938.28 million acres of farmland. I would like someone who keeps track of this page or whatever to check again in case I got it wrong or something. If so, the numbers calculated will also have to change. Assuming that the rest of the calculations are correct: the US has approx. 938 million acres of farmland. Average corn yield is 140 bushels per acre. Amount of ethanol from a bushel of corn is 2.5 gallons. Therefore, the US could produce 328.3 billion gallons of ethanol if it allocated all of its farmland to such production. By the way, reference 49 goes to United States Facts Sheet. --Shiftingskye (talk) 08:47, 27 January 2008 (UTC) [edit] Ethanol toxicityAn acupuncturist, Jim Butler saw this discussion on my webpage, copied below. He decided to make the edit before the discussion was finalised. I've brought it here for discussion. We are back to this again. Once again, the sentence as you have left it implies that any solvent, no matter how toxic, would be ok for this, provided it was cheap. This is clearly not the case. I have tried to come up with compromise language for this, but you object to that as well. Please fix the sentence so that it explains the full reason for use in human-consumable products. And note that your insistence that it is either toxic or it isn't is hogwash. You can find the phrase "low toxicity" over and over again in the Merck Index of Chemicals and Drugs, for numerous compounds. So the phrase does and an understood meaning. Karl Hahn (T) (C) 16:55, 23 January 2008 (UTC)
Karl, you logic is wrong in several places that I hope you will reveal to yourself on careful re-reading. You also misquote me again. Ethanol is harmful to some foetuses. Our major difference is on your claim that it is "widely and generally understood". Given all that can we agree on "as listed in the Merck index"? Mccready (talk) 07:25, 24 January 2008 (UTC)
Can we agree to remove claim for low toxicity, however defined, from the head. It has the potential to confuse the general reader. I'm very happy for full discussion within the article. Mccready (talk) 10:14, 27 January 2008 (UTC)
Do you guys dispute that pregnant women are advised to avoid drinking ethanol because of proven foetal alcohol syndrome at low doses? Mccready (talk) 11:04, 27 January 2008 (UTC)
[edit] CombustionThe formula given for combustion in this article doesn't look right. Hydrogen doesn't balance. I know it's ugly, but I think the formula should be more like C2H5OH + Am I missing something here? I'm not a chemist, just an engineering student. 142.150.137.124 (talk) 17:01, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Source of octane rating?Hi there! I might have missed something but I could not find the reference or the source of the octane number. 1Chaan (talk) —Preceding comment was added at 19:15, 11 February 2008 (UTC) [edit] Alcohol fuelThe World price for sugar is 7 cents a pound. What is the price of alcohol/fuel per gallon ? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Woofbarkwoof (talk • contribs) 00:41, 22 February 2008 (UTC) [edit] New paragraph in 'controversy' sectionI have no real knowledge of this topic or the politics surrounding it. With that in mind, I didn't feel qualified to re-write a large paragraph that was recently added (diff here), however it still reads like it might not be wholly NPOV. Perhaps someone here with more insight than I could take a peek? --PeruvianLlama(spit) 08:28, 17 March 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Putting food in your gas tank while people in the Third World starve because of soaring food pricesNow, first of all, I'm not speaking on behalf of any oil companies, car companies, or right-wing groups. Besides, I'm a pro-environment centrist who drives a hybrid. My question is: how people can continue to put food in their gas tank, while knowning full well that the increased demand for corn—because of ethanol fuel use—is making it impossible for people in the Third World to eat? Would someone mind offering an explanation for that? Ericster08 (talk) 16:08, 30 April 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Strange sentance"Ethanol is also known as EtOH, using the common organic chemistry notation of representing the ethyl group (C2H5) with Et. The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism maintains an EtOH database.[1]" This last sentance really has nothing to do with ethanol, other than sharing the name. I'm going to take it out. Rhetth (talk) 21:55, 19 June 2008 (UTC) [[Media:'ethanol is aone of the use full liquid.95% alcohol is dilute with water.form a win.']] —Preceding unsigned comment added by 59.93.53.152 (talk) 05:29, 1 October 2008 (UTC) [edit] wasteDoes anybody know if there is any waste FROM ethanol? How is it disposed? it seems that Ethanol is from all sorts of wastes. urgent --Ratstail91 (talk) 23:08, 8 December 2008 (UTC) [edit]This is something that comes from anti-alcohol groups like MADD. The term "alcohol related deaths" only relates to if there was alcohol involved in a death. If I were drunk and I walked onto a road and got hit and killed by a perfectly sober driver, MADD would classify my death as an "alcohol related death". But "MADD" stands for "Mothers against drunk DRIVERS". They shouldn't count my death. In additition, most deaths that are stated as "alcohol related" mean that SOMEONE involved in the death (a driver, a pedestrian, a passenger, ANYONE) had a non 0.00 reading. That obviously overstates by a huge amount what MADD is going for. But, of course, MADD will NEVER mention that little fact. A statement like "50% of deaths are alcohol related" is almost as close as as meaningless as "50% of deaths were female". 99.9% could be drunk people walking and falling right in front of a car. I bet MADD would love that. Then they could say that there were 99.9% of alcohol related deaths. At least be honest. And don't try to impress people with numbers or percentages. Sure, maybe 50% of deaths included alcohol. Now tell me how many of those deaths included alcohol by the VICTIMS. And also tell me how many deaths included alcohol by the drivers or their passengers. And also tell me who many of those drivers were WELL below the legal limit, but did not score 0.00? And also tell me how many of his/her passengers were above legal level? Now give me REAL numbers. If a perfectly sober driver has a legally drunk passenger and a death somehow occurs, MADD will count it as an "alcohol related death". If a legally drunk driver or passenger or pedestrian dies, MADD counts it as an "alcohol related death". Show some REAL statistics. What MADD does is just ridiculous. What MADD does is that it counts EVERY incident in which there was even ONE measurable drop of alcohol involved. And they do NOT distinguish between victims, passengers, drivers. Like I said, if 99 people are legally drunk, and just 1 is NOT, and they walk onto a highway and get killed by cars that are obeying all the laws, their drivers being perfectly sober, MADD counts this as 99%. Even if I'm in a car driven by a perfectly sober driver, and I am a passenger at 0.01, WAY BELOW the limit, if the car hit a perfectly sober pedestrian, MADD STILL counts it as an alcohol-related death. That's how they get their inflated numbers. What MADD does is just show percentages and then they make it seem like the DRIVER was drunk. They make it seem like "alcohol related" is the same as "the DRIVER was drunk". At least be honest when making your case. And your son or daughter was probably drunk too. Why don't you EVER mention that? I am really sorry you lost your son or daughter. But it could have VERY EASILY be your son or daughter taking the wheel instead. And, if your son or daughter was so holy and so "good", why would he or she get into a car driven by a drunk person? MADD is about sons or daughters lost in drunk driving accidents. Your sons and daughters, in a LOT of cases, were drunk too. But they died. If they had lived, they would have been in prison too. Hypocrites. 97.103.80.222 (talk) 02:43, 30 December 2008 (UTC) [edit] Reference to EtOH being used as abbreviation by medical staffI have removed a reference in the introduction referring to the abbreviation EtOH being used by EMS and medical staff. I think this is really just trivia and at the very most could be mentioned later in the article. I don't think it is important enough to mention in the introduction. Yes we do use the term EtOH (usually ETOH without the lowercase 't'), but this is only as a semi-euphomism as it is easier mentally to right down "heavy ETOH intake" on a chart than "heavy alcohol intake". I have left the mention of EtOH as a common abbreviation, but I don't think pointing out use by one particular group as particularly useful seeing as I am sure many different groups of people use the abbreviation. Why mention one specifically? What do others think? Jath Jpala (talk) 15:33, 13 January 2009 (UTC) [edit] PurificationI moved up the dessication techniques because these are used in virtually all corn based ethanol production. AGeorgas (talk) 04:13, 30 April 2009 (UTC) [edit] Brazil and ethanol as fuel (hydrous) and as additive (anhydrous) for gasolineIn Brazil we use anhydrous ethanol as an additive for gasoline (known as Gasohol or E25) because if it contains water, it could form a two phase solution with the gasoline, but the "pure" ethanol in our fuel pumps actually is in the hydrous (94%-96%) form wich is cheaper to obtain. Spra (talk) 01:38, 17 June 2009 (UTC) [edit] Breading in medical 70% ethanolEvery time I feel my nose is going to get runny, or sneezy, or that my throat will start getting sore - some respiratory inflammation processes generally - I smear some alcohol on my palms and form a cavity with my hands so I breed in alcohol fumes thus created (through mouth or nose). It helps me definitely in suppressing "cold-catching" symptoms and pollen allergy symptoms during summer, but - can there be some problems associated with long term practice of such "medication"? (If not - such practice could become very effective and cheap preventive for common diseases of the type - one more use of ethanol to add to the list...) 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