The drawbacks of alcohol as thermometric liquid are :
- Bad conductor of heat
- no uniform rate of expansion
- it sticks on inner wall of capillary tube.
Alcohol thermometers are used rather than mercury thermometers in very cold regions because alcohol has a lower freezing point than mercury. Pure ethanol freezes at -115 degrees C, while mercury freezes at -38 degrees C. Thermometers rely upon thermal expansion of the liquid in a bulb at the base of a thin glass tube.Alcohol thermometers are also inexpensive and durable. They are typically not as accurate as mercury thermometers because of the alcohol's susceptibility to evaporation, polymerization potential and capillary separation. Their primary advantage is safety to humans and the environment.
Ethanol-filled thermometers are used in preference to mercury for meteorological measurements of minimum temperatures and can be used down to −70 °C (−94 °F). The physical limitation of the ability of a thermometer to measure low temperature is the freezing point of the liquid used.Alcohol thermometers are used rather than mercury thermometers in very cold regions because alcohol has a lower freezing point than mercury. Pure ethanol freezes at -115 degrees C, while mercury freezes at -38 degrees C. ... Since alcohol is colorless a dye is added.
Disadvantages. Liquid in glass thermometers tend to be fragile and hence easily broken, can only be used where the liquid column is visible, cannot be used for surface temperature measurements, cannot be read from a distance and are unsuitable for high temperature measurements.