“…[1,10,11,12] The concept of a general internal nucleophilic substitution mechanism S N i, which is neither simply S N 1 nor S N 2, was first invoked to explain unusual stereochemical outcomes of simple alkyl halides, and then proposed for glycosyl transfer mechanism, in the absence of any enzyme, to explain the retention of anomeric stereochemistry in the solvolysis of α-glucosyl fluoride by mixtures of ethanol and trifluorethanol. [10] In this mechanism leaving group departure and nucleophilic attack occur on the same face of the sugar [13] , involving either a short-lived oxocarbenium ion intermediate (S N i-like) [6,9,14,15,16] or an oxocarbenium ion transition state (S N i).…”