Mercaptans are a group of chemical compounds similar to alcohols, but with the oxygen in the OH group replaced with sulfur. Because sulfur is just below oxygen in the periodic table, many alcohols have sulfur containing analogs. The modern IUPAC nomenclature for the older name "mercaptans " is alkanethiol or simply thiol. The -SH group of these compounds is called a thiol group or a sulfhydryl group.
                                  H
       H                      H H S H
       |                      | | | |
     H-C-SH                 H-C-C-C-C-H
       |                      | | | |
       H                      H H H H

   Methanethiol             2-butanethiol

The most characteristic property of thiols are their odor. The human nose can detect the presence of these compounds at levels of about 0.02 ppb (that is parts per billion!). These compounds are found for instance in the spray of skunks, or as breakdown products during the digestion of asparagus. Mercaptans are also added to butane for domestic applications, so that consumers can smell whenever they have a gas leak (butane itself is odorless).