Under normal pH conditions, an excess of 3 stoichiometric amounts of ketone catalyst are needed due to a high rate of decomposition. At basic pH conditions greater than 10 (pH 10.5) substoichiometric amounts (0.2–0.3) are needed for epoxidations, lowering the decomposition of reagents by disfavoring the Baeyer-Villiger
side reaction. Higher temperatures result in further decomposition; thus a low temperature of zero degrees Celsius is used. used in epoxidation Decomposition of reagents is bimolecular (
second-order reaction rate), so low amounts of oxone and catalyst are used. The reaction is mediated by a D-fructose derived catalyst, which produces the (R,R) enantiomer of the resulting epoxide. Solubilities of olefin organic substrate and oxidant (oxone) differ, and thus a
biphasic medium is needed. The generation of the active catalyst species takes place in the aqueous layer, and is shuttled to the organic layer with the reactants by tetrabutylammonium sulfate. The ketone catalyst is continuously regenerated in a catalytic cycle, and thus can catalyze the
epoxidation in small amounts. and its reaction with alkene substrate. The first step in the catalytic cycle reaction is the
nucleophilic addition reaction of the oxone with the ketone group on the catalyst (intermediate 1). This forms the reactive intermediate number 2 species, the
Criegee intermediate that can potentially lead to unwanted side reactions, such as the Baeyer-Villiger reaction (see below). The generation of intermediate species number 3 occurs under basic conditions, with a removal of the hydrogen from the
hydroxy group to form a nucleophilic oxygen anion. The sulfate group facilitates the subsequent formation of the dioxirane, intermediate species number 4, by acting as a good leaving group during the
3-exo-tet cyclization. The activated dioxirane catalytic species then transfers an oxygen atom to the alkene, leading to a regeneration of the original catalyst.
Side reactions A potential side reaction that may occur is the
Baeyer-Villiger reaction of intermediate 2, where there is a rearrangement of the
peroxy group that results in the formation of the relative ester. The extent of this side reaction declines with the rise of pH, and increases the nucleophilicity of the oxone, making basic conditions favorable for the overall epoxidation and reactivity of the catalytic species. == Epoxidation mechanisms ==