I'm just a curious layperson, chemistry was my least-favorite of the natural sciences in high school.
I have a personal care product that is labelled as "alcohol free," but when reading the ingredients list I came across
"Hydroxyethyl cellulose" (HEC). I was looking up all the ingredients, and became curious about this one due to the "alcohol free" claim. I recognize "ethyl" as somehow being related to alcohol. So I read the
Wikipedia page about alcohol, and read "When a higher priority group [than the hydroxyl group] is present in the compound, the prefix hydroxy- is used in its IUPAC name."
I tried researching about functional groups, but I didn't get much other than a list of the order of functional groups. I'm too unknowledgeable and inexperienced to recognize these functional groups in chemical substances; I can compare which atoms are in the molecules, and not much else.
From the image on the Alcohol page, it seems to me that any substance with a "hydroxyl functional group bound to a saturated carbon atom" should be an alcohol. But this can't be right, because cellulose (seems to me to) have this property and obviously isn't an alcohol. I'm a bit fuzzy on what "saturated" means, but some quick searching led me to believe that it means a carbon atom with four single bonds. Because a carbon atom with a double bond is unsaturated by definition.
Because HEC has hydroxyl groups by virtue of its name, I wonder if it is more of a technical/definitional distinction to not classify it as an alcohol. Although I guess simply having a hydroxyl group is not enough, but looking at the ball and stick model and counting bonds it seems to me that it is indeed an alcohol according the above definition.
TL;DR: Would you call HEC an alcohol, and why/why not? Does HEC not share properties with most alcohols?