A diol - Question about this organic commpound

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5-methylheptane-1,4-diol is an organic compound that raises questions about its educational resources and practical significance. For those looking to learn about this compound, starting with its structural drawing and identifying key functional groups is recommended. Basic physical properties, such as melting and boiling points, can often be found through online searches, particularly on platforms like Wikipedia. The compound features both primary and secondary alcohol groups, which exhibit typical properties associated with alcohols. However, it lacks notable industrial applications or interesting properties, making it less relevant in practical chemical studies. While it may occasionally appear in niche contexts, such as pharmaceuticals or natural metabolites, it is not a focal point of study in organic chemistry.
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5-methylheptane1,4-diol.

I couldn't find where can I start learning this organic compound? I don't have access to any books to refer to so I'm wondering which lesson can I find this compound as an example? And I've never seen a compound with a diol. Thanks
 
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What do you mean by "learning a compound"?

If you are interested in its properties, first thing to do is to draw the compound and to identify the most important functional groups. Physical properties (melting & boiling point) can be with some luck found by googling.
 
Yes that is what I do, Google, and usually Wikipedia has information on many compounds, usually much that you cannot predict let alone carry in your head. I think it is fair to say that the compound like this has no interesting properties! – That is the primary alcohol group has properties of any primary alcohol and the secondary of any secondary. Then two alcohols can form an ether; If two alcohol groups are on the same molecule an internal ether can be formed.

You can hardly predict from first principles of industrial importance or application of a compound, and that is part of a general chemical culture to know something of. This does not appear to have any. You never know but what things like this turn up as part of some drug or other, or as an obscure metabolite found only in sponges, but such accidents are hardly a theme you can study in itself.
 
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