Hi,
Thanks for the advice guys,
I've written a new reaction scheme.
The steps are:
1. -OH nucleophile abstracts H from the carboxylic acid (the most acidic hydrogen in the system), O-H bond breaks, pair of electrons move to the oxygen
2. The anionic O is a strong nucleophile and attacks the weakly electrophilic alpha carbon, in an SN2 reaction - the Br is the leaving group. Inversion of configuration occurs, and an epoxide type strained-ring structure is formed
Some confusion at this point:
Either the acid protonates the oxygen in the epoxide ring, then a new OH- nucleophile attacks the alpha-carbon to form a hydroxyl group, opening the ring..and lastly the O- is protonated.
Or
The way I drew the mechanism
3. OH- nucleophile attacks the alpha-carbon, by SN2. The ring opens and inversion has occurred (so the configuration at the alpha carbon has been retained)
4. Acid protonates the O- to form the final product.
Would the acid protonate the epoxide-type ring first? Or is the way I've drawn this acceptable?
Thanks again