depends on the ratio and conditions really, if there is enough you will make co2 water manganese 2,3 oxide and potassium oxide if not you will make c2 h2 o2 or some other partially oxidized hydrocarbon
KMnO4 + Na2C2O4 -> MnO2 + CO2 + H2O + K2SO4 + Na2SO4
I THINK
not 100%
someone verify?
A cis glycol namely 2-methyl-2,3-butadiol is formed.
Cyclohexene does react with KMnO4, or in lamence terms, potassium permanganate. Cyclohexene can also be written as C6H10. Cyclohexene is made when benzene is partially hydrogenated.
In cold condition acetylene forms the formic acid and in hot condition it forms the oxalic acid with potassium permanganate.
This is an oxidation process of Hexene the aqueos KMnO4 produces Hexane glycol (Hexadiol).
MnO4- + 5e- + 8H+ -------> Mn2+ + 4H2O in acidic solution.
The chemical equation is:
KMnO4 + H(OH) → MnO2 + K+ + OH- + O*
its formic acid HCOOH
there will be a chemical reaction called combustion. potassium permanganate as the oxidant and oil obviously as fuel if the two were mixed they needed to release energy in form of heat.
the purple color changes to a deep green color and then brown (these are the colors you will see on your filter paper)
Electrons move from the potassium atoms to the sulfur atoms.
The solubility of potassium nitrate increase with the temperature.
nothing
it makes potassium permanganate with water and glycine...
boom
When potassium permanganate is dropped into water, the ions are solvated by the water molecules. This results because potassium permanganate is water soluble. Thus, the solid compound is separated into aqueous ions.
Oxidised from Fe2+ to Fe2+
chlorine gas is produced
there will be a chemical reaction called combustion. potassium permanganate as the oxidant and oil obviously as fuel if the two were mixed they needed to release energy in form of heat.
according to the amount we put the change from dark purple to pink color
"Reaction with what other substance? It needs something to react with." Yes, it depends with what it is reacting.....but permanganate is a oxidative reagent, so it could possible oxidate others reagents, like carbon double bonds or triple bonds....if it is acidic solution, it´s more oxidant....it can break bonds and oxidate organic compounds.....itI think that the question is what happens when potassium permanganate (manganate VII) is heated.potassium permanganate + heat= potassium oxide + oxygen
3 Zn + Cr2O72- + 14 H+ → 3 Zn2+ + 2 Cr3+ + 7 H2O
The electrolyte used in alkaline dry cell batteries is usually potassium hydroxide.The main advantage of the alkaline potassium hydroxide electrolyte over the acidic ammonium chloride electrolyte in conventional dry cell batteries is that if it happens to leak outside the battery case it will not corrode the metal parts of the device it is powering (but the leakage still makes a mess that should be cleaned out when replacing the bad batteries with good ones).
Acetylene will change colour from orange to colourless.
KMno4 is reduced to Mn^2+ Salt and the pink colour is discharged by the nascent hydrogen produced when zinc reacts with h2so4