Overview: Baeyer-Villiger oxidations are a really handy way to make esters from ketones. The general form of this reaction is as follows: Under basic conditions, a peroxide can be deprotonated. This nucleophilic species can then attack a carbonyl group to form a tetrahedral intermediate. Once the tetrahedral intermediate collapses, instead of kicking the peroxide back off, the more highly substituted alkyl substituent makes a sigmatropic shift to the oxygen, kicking off the alcoxide as the leaving group, forming the ester. Example of a Baeyer-Villiger oxidation: Here the common MCPBA (m-chlorobenzoic acid) is used as the peroxide. It is one of the most common peroxides because it is cheap and crystalline, and can be used in stoichiometric quantities. |
Sunday 14 July 2013
Baeyer-Villiger oxidation
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Organic Chemistry
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