KMnO4 Titration, why does it need to be in an acid?

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    Acid Titration
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The discussion centers on the necessity of acid in the titration of Fe(NH4)2(SO4)2*6H2O with KMnO4. It highlights that in a neutral solution, KMnO4 would degrade to MnO2, preventing the redox reaction from reaching the equivalence point. The presence of hydronium ions is crucial for the reaction to proceed, as they facilitate the reduction of permanganate to Mn2+. Without acid, alternative reactions could occur, but they would not yield the same products or color change. Acidification ensures a consistent reduction product and maintains the necessary redox potential for effective oxidation of Fe(II).
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1. Homework Statement

Fe(NH4)2(SO4)2*6H2O is mixed with H2SO4 and then titrated with KMnO4 until the equivalence point is reached.
The question I am confused with is:
What might have been the product(s) in the original solution if it had remained neutral? (if the solution was not acidified with H2SO4) How could you determine this?


2. Homework Equations

Net Ionic Equation:
8H+ + MnO4- + 5Fe2+ => Mn2+ + 4H2O + 5Fe3+


3. The Attempt at a Solution

From the wikipedia page on this, it says that potassium permanganate degrades into MnO2 when reacted in a neutral equation. I would think that the redox reaction would still occur between the Fe2+ solution and the KMnO4, but it wouldn't reach the equivalence point since there is no acid...so it wouldn't change color?

 
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You have written part of the justification for doing the titration in acid conditions. Hydronium ions participate in the reaction.
 
Okay, so the above reaction couldn't take place without the hydrogen ions. Would a different reaction occur? Or would no reaction occur? My best guess would be something like: Fe2+ + MnO4- => MnO2 + O2 + Fe3+?
 
Depending on conditions permanganate gets reduced to manganate, manganese dioxide, or Mn2+. Low pH guarantees only one reduction product and high enough redox potential to proceed with oxidation of Fe(II).
 
I think the potassium manganate (VII) must be acidified, so that the hydrogen ions will mop up any excess oxygen atoms that were otherwise not taken up.
 
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