Propanol, commonly referring to 1-propanol (n-propanol), is a primary alcohol solvent widely used in biochemistry laboratories. Its intermediate polarity between ethanol and longer-chain alcohols makes it particularly valuable for extraction procedures, precipitation techniques, and molecular workflows requiring controlled solvent strength.
Chemical Properties
1-Propanol (CH₃CH₂CH₂OH) consists of a linear three-carbon backbone bearing a terminal hydroxyl group. The molecule exhibits sp³ hybridization and presents a boiling point of 97.2°C, a melting point of −126°C, and a density of 0.804 g/mL. It is fully miscible with water, ethanol, chloroform, and ether, with a dielectric constant of approximately 20. Its strong hydrogen-bonding capacity supports the solubilization of polar biomolecules while maintaining partial miscibility with hydrocarbons. A vapor pressure of approximately 20 mmHg at 25°C allows efficient evaporative recovery.
Biochemical Applications
In lipid biochemistry, 1-propanol is used for glycolipid elution in thin-layer chromatography (TLC) systems and can serve as an alternative to methanol in Folch extraction protocols, reducing emulsion formation during phase separation. For protein precipitation, ice-cold propanol efficiently precipitates enzymes from dilute solutions, achieving recovery rates exceeding 85%, and complements acetone in proteomics sample preparation for mass spectrometry workflows.
Within molecular biology applications, 1-propanol is employed for agarose gel washing after electrophoresis and for solubilizing antibiotics or PCR additives without inhibiting polymerase activity. It is also utilized in diagnostic settings to support viral inactivation procedures.

