Glycerol

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This article/section is a stub — some half-sorted notes, not necessarily checked, not necessarily correct. Feel free to ignore, or tell me about it.

Glycerol - a clear, viscous, odourless, slightly sweet, non-toxic liquid

used e.g. as a solvent, a sweetener, a preservative, a thickening agent, a humectant
has some anti-freeze properties
has a few medical uses
A specific compound (C3H8O3), and technically a triol (with three OH groups)


Glycerol and glycerin (US) / glycerine (UK) refer to the same molecule, yet glycerin is a commercial term that typically refers to mixes that are >95% of it by volume.

See also:



More widely, you can look at diols and triols.

You may see the term glycol[1], which is the property/grouping of aliphatic diols, where

aliphatic = non-aromatic
diol = alcohols with two OH functional groups (triols have three)


Some compounds in this area include (but are certainly not limited to)

  • glycerol/glycerin[2], as mentioned
used as a sweetener (then also known as E422), humectant, preservant, and is used in personal lube


  • propylene glycol[3], functionally somewhat similar to glycerol
E1520 when used for food
E490 when used for cosmetics
  • polyethylene glycol[4]
biologically inert
used in skin creams, personal lubricant, used for larger and longer-lasting soap bubbles


  • ethylene glycol[5]
e.g. used in classical antifreeze
treat as being bad for people
  • diethylene glycol[6] (hydrolysed ethylene glycol)
e.g. a solvent
treat as being bad for people



Smoke machine fluids seem to often be glycerol or propylene glycol (sometimes other glycols, but not ethylene glycol) and water, though there appear to be some newer formulations that leave less residue(verify).


Vaping liquid has a base that is often a mix of part glycerin (smoother, cloudier) and propylene glycol.