OK. This is a typical undergraduate Organic chemistry lab. You haven't organized your question very carefully 'tho. So lets work together on that ...
In lab, I crystallized and melted an unknown compound in which the melting range was between 76 and 80 degrees Celsius.
OK. That a slightly wider range than I'd like to see. But fine. The CRC lists compounds by melting point. But we rarely work by starting here.
Ethanol was used as a solvent.
OK, we can use this information to narrow down possibilities, using reference sources. But we're not here yet.
My compound didn't smell like anything
Odorless solid. Good info for narrowing down. Not time to be narrowing down, yet.
until after it was crystallized
OK, acquired odor after purification. That's weird. Unless it decomposed at that point. Yet more info we really can't use.
and stored in my lab locker.
You're sure it didn't pick up odors from the storage locker. Right?
It smelled a bit like acid.
I'm sorry. I don't recognize 'acid' as an odor. This makes it hard for me to take any of this seriously. But with better starting information, we can use the info for later.
The problem is, I don't know what compound it is out of glycolic acid, phenylacetic acid, and naphathalene.
OK, this is where you should have started the question. Also, how did you react them? What is the topic of this particular organic chem laboratory session?
I know that ethanol is a solvent for phenylacetic acid, but what about glycolic acid? I don't think my compound is naphathalene since it didn't smell much like mothballs. What is the solvent for glycolic acid? Can anyone help me with this? Thank you.
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Borek: said, you have to review references to get information for yourself that isn't confusing.