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Describe with an example the oxidising actions of the permanganate ion in acidic media. What acids are actually used for? - Chemistry (Theory)

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Question

Describe with an example the oxidising actions of the permanganate ion in acidic media. What acids are actually used for?

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Solution

In an acidic medium, the permanganate ion (MnO4−) acts as a strong oxidising agent. It gets reduced from Mn7+ to Mn2+, and in the process, it oxidises other substances.

The reduction half-reaction of the permanganate ion in an acidic medium is:

\[\ce{MnO^-_4 + 8H+ + 5e- -> Mn^{2+} + 4H2O}\]

Example:

When potassium permanganate is added to an acidified ferrous sulphate solution, the ferrous ion (Fe2+) is oxidised to ferric ion (Fe3+), and the permanganate ion is reduced to (Mn2+).

\[\ce{MnO^-_4 + 5Fe^{2+} + 8H+ -> Mn^{2+} + 5Fe^{3+} + 4H2O}\]

Dilute sulphuric acid (H2SO4) is used to provide the acidic medium.

It does not interfere with the redox reaction.

Hydrochloric acid (HCl) is not used, as it gets oxidised to chlorine gas.

Nitric acid (HNO3) is also not suitable, as it is itself a strong oxidising agent.

Thus, KMnO4 acts as a strong oxidising agent in an acidic medium and oxidises Fe2+ to Fe3+ using dilute sulphuric acid.

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Chapter 8: d-and ƒ-Block Elements - REVIEW EXERCISES [Page 484]

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Nootan Chemistry Part 1 and 2 [English] Class 12 ISC
Chapter 8 d-and ƒ-Block Elements
REVIEW EXERCISES | Q 8.42 iii. | Page 484
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