oxycations
Oxycations are positively charged species in which the formal positive charge resides on an oxygen atom. The most familiar example is the oxonium ion H3O+, produced by protonation of water. Other common oxycations include protonated alcohols (ROH2+) and protonated ethers (ROR'H2+), collectively referred to as oxonium ions. A related and structurally important class are oxocarbenium ions, which are resonance-stabilized cations in which a positive charge is delocalized between oxygen and an adjacent carbon center.
Oxycations arise in acid-catalyzed processes and in solid or solution-phase reactions under strongly acidic conditions. Protonation
The stability of oxycations depends on substitution, resonance, and solvation. Proximity to electron-donating groups or neighboring
In their role as reactive intermediates, oxycations act as electrophiles that undergo nucleophilic attack, rearrangement, or