alkolysis
Alkolysis is a chemical process in which a solvent, usually an alcohol, reacts with a solute to break it down into smaller molecules. This process is analogous to hydrolysis, where water is used as the solvent, and solvolysis, a more general term for reactions involving a solvent. In alkolysis, the alcohol molecule acts as a nucleophile, attacking a bond within the solute molecule and causing it to cleave. This typically results in the formation of new compounds where the alcohol has added across the broken bond, or parts of the alcohol molecule have replaced other groups.
Alkolysis reactions are often employed in organic chemistry for synthesis and degradation. For example, esters can