Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 10, 2026

Butanediol

Butanediol, also called butylene glycol, may refer to any one of four stable structural isomers:1,2-Butanediol 1,3-Butanediol 1,4-Butanediol 2,3-Butanediol

Last revised
Jun 10, 2026
Read time
≈ 1 min
Length
146 w
Citations
2
Source

Butanediol, also called butylene glycol, may refer to any one of four stable structural isomers:

Geminal diols

There are also two geminal diols (gem-diols), which are less stable:

Isobutylene glycol and methylpropanediol

Isobutylene glycol may be considered a kind of butylene glycol, similarly to butane historically including n-butane and i-butane (isobutane). The modern name for the closely related type of compounds is methylpropanediol. There are two stable structural isomers:

  • 2-methylpropane-1,2-diol
  • 2-methylpropane-1,3-diol

and one unstable geminal diol:

  • 2-methylpropane-1,1-diol (not a glycol), hydrate of 2-methylpropanal (isobutyraldehyde)

These three methylpropanediols are structural isomers of butanediols. They are not chiral.

Examples

2-Methylpropane-1,3-diol derivatives:

See also

See also

References

References

  1. "Butanediol". PubChem.
  2. "Propanediol, methyl-". PubChem.