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familierol

Familierol is a fictional organic compound used in educational contexts to illustrate concepts in natural products chemistry and nomenclature. It is not present in standard chemical databases and is commonly employed as a model molecule in teaching materials and coursework.

Name and origin: The name combines “familia” (from Latin for family) and the common -erol suffix used

Structure and properties: In typical teaching descriptions, familierol is a polycyclic terpenoid with a fused ring

Occurrence and synthesis: As a teaching molecule, familierol is described as either obtainable from a fictional

Applications and significance: The compound is used to demonstrate extraction, purification, and spectroscopic structure elucidation (NMR,

for
alcohol-containing
terpenoids.
In
the
illustrative
scenario,
familierol
is
described
in
studies
of
a
hypothetical
plant
genus
named
Familia
and
is
presented
alongside
other
model
compounds
to
demonstrate
routine
workflows
in
isolation
and
analysis.
system
and
a
single
hydroxyl
group.
It
is
depicted
as
lipophilic
with
limited
water
solubility
and
relatively
stable
under
ambient
conditions.
The
exact
stereochemistry
is
chosen
to
yield
a
nontrivial
but
textbook-like
NMR
pattern
for
instructional
purposes.
plant
species
or
accessible
via
a
straightforward
total
synthesis
in
educational
materials.
There
are
no
real-world
references
to
its
occurrence
or
production
outside
of
fictional
or
hypothetical
contexts,
where
it
serves
as
a
placeholder
for
genuine
natural
products.
MS),
as
well
as
to
discuss
biosynthetic
logic
in
a
controlled,
hypothetical
setting.
It
provides
a
clear,
didactic
example
of
how
chemists
approach
polarity,
functional
groups,
and
stereochemistry
without
relying
on
a
real-world
substance.