Potassium permanganate can be used for degrading hazardous compounds.
Solutions of potassium permanganate in 3 M sulfuric acid, 1 M sodium hydroxide solution, and water can be used to degrade hazardous compounds. Excess oxidant can be removed by using sodium metabisulfite. Manganese, a carcinogen and mutagen, can be removed from the final reaction mixtures by making these mixtures strongly basic. Aqueous dilution causes the soluble potassium sulfate to dissolve while still allowing the insoluble manganese compounds to be removed by filtration and so reduces the weight of precipitate. In all cases the amount of manganese left in the filtrates was less than 2 ppm and the reaction mixtures were nonmutagenic. When ethanol was used as a test compound, degradation was much more rapid when the solvent was 3 M sulfuric acid or 1 M sodium hydroxide solution than when the solvent was water. However, the variation of the rate of reaction with pH depends on the nature of the substrate. Thus the effectiveness of the various methods may vary for other substrates. Potassium permanganate in sulfuric acid was used to degrade four polycyclic heterocyclic hydrocarbons. Destruction was greater than 99.9% and the final reaction mixtures contained no more than 0.5 ppm manganese and were not mutagenic. By modifying the work-up procedures to remove manganese from the final reaction mixture, procedures previously developed for degrading hazardous compounds can still be employed.[1]References
- Potassium permanganate can be used for degrading hazardous compounds. Lunn, G., Sansone, E.B., De Méo, M., Laget, M., Castegnaro, M. American Industrial Hygiene Association journal. (1994) [Pubmed]
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