Oxidation of a Monoenoic Acid:
Using oleic acid as an example, a hydrogen could be
removed from either C-8 or C-10, as these positions are located
alpha to the double bond. Abstraction from carbon 8 results in
the two radicals A and B which are positional isomers of each
other stabilized by resonance:

Or abstraction from carbon 11 can occur, resulting in the two
radicals C and D:

Oxygen can be added to each radical to form peroxy radicals
at C-8, C-9, C-10 or C-11. Addition to the 8 and 10 positions
yield the peroxy radicals shown below:

These radicals may abstract hydrogens from other molecules to
yield the hydroperoxides shown below:

The addition oxygen at the 11 and 9 positions with subsequent
addition of abstracted hydrogen molecules results in the peroxy
radicals and hydroperoxides shown below:


The situation with a dienoic acid is a little different. While
there are more positions a to a double bond, there is one
position that is a to two double bonds. This position is very
reactive. For linoleic acid, carbon 11 is a to two double bonds
and will be removed to yield:

There are two possible resonant structures that can result
from this radical. The radical may shift to carbon 14 with the
double bond reforming between carbons 11 and 12. The radical may
also shift to carbon 9 with the double bond forming between
carbons 10 and 11. Both of these cases result in conjugated
structures that are at lower energies than are the non conjugated
structures they were derived from. For this reason, the oxidation
of linoleic acid yields approximately equal amounts of the C 13
and C 9 radical with only traces of the original C 11 radical
present. The resonant structures formed are shown below:

Addition of oxygen and abstraction of hydrogen from other
molecules would yield equal amounts of 13-hydroperoxido- 8, 11
octadecadienoic acid and 9- hydroperoxido 10,12
-octadecadienoic acid. The 11 - hydroperoxido- 9, 12
-octadecadienoic acid is essentially nonexistent.
Once formed, hydroperoxides may break down through a number of
mechanisms. A common breakdown scheme is called dismutation. In
this reaction a hydroperoxide reacts with another molecule or
radical to form two new compounds.

This reaction scheme is capable of generating aldehydes,
ketones, alcohols and hydrocarbons. Many of the volatile
compounds formed during lipid oxidation originate through similar
dismutations.
Hydroperoxides are not stable compounds and given time, they will
break down. A typical mechanism, as shown below, results in the
formation of two radicals from a single hydroperoxide molecule.

Both of these new radicals can initiate further oxidation.
Some metals can speed up this reaction. For example:

Note that both ions and free radicals were formed. The net
reaction is:
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Copper was the catalyst. Copper did not initiate the reaction,
but once the hydroperoxides were formed, it sped up their
breakdown.