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A tank initially contains 60 gal of pure water. Brine (saltwater) containing 1lb of salt per gallon enters the tank at 2gal/min. and the (perfectly mixed) solution leaves the tank at 3 gal/min; thus the tank is empty after exactly 1 hr.
a)Find the amount of salt in the tank after t minutes.
b)What is the maximum amount of salt ever in the tank?
Let Q be the amount of salt.
I'll work with part a) first:
\frac{dQ}{dt} = rate_{entering} - rate_{leaving}
Rate of entering: 1lb/gal * 2gal/min = 2lb/min
Rate of leaving: \frac{Q}{(60-t)} \cdot \frac{3gal}{min} = \frac{3Q}{60-t}
This gives me the first order linear differential to be:
\frac{dQ}{dt} = 2 - \frac{3Q}{60-t}
\frac{dQ}{dt} + \frac{3Q}{60-t} = 2
Well P(x) or P(t) in this case would be 3/(60-t), which when worked out would give me an integration factor of (60-t)^3.
I would eventually get:
Q\cdot (60-t)^3 = \int 2(60-t)^3
Q\cdot (60-t)^3 = \frac{(60-t)^4}{2} + C
Q = \frac{60-t}{2} + \frac{C}{(60-t)^3}
Before I go ahead and find a specific solution, is my general solution correct?
HallsofIvy
Feb27-07, 06:25 AM
A tank initially contains 60 gal of pure water. Brine (saltwater) containing 1lb of salt per gallon enters the tank at 2gal/min. and the (perfectly mixed) solution leaves the tank at 3 gal/min; thus the tank is empty after exactly 1 hr.
a)Find the amount of salt in the tank after t minutes.
b)What is the maximum amount of salt ever in the tank?
Let Q be the amount of salt.
I'll work with part a) first:
\frac{dQ}{dt} = rate_{entering} - rate_{leaving}
Rate of entering: 1lb/gal * 2gal/min = 2lb/min
Rate of leaving: \frac{Q}{(60-t)} \cdot \frac{3gal}{min} = \frac{3Q}{60-t}
This gives me the first order linear differential to be:
\frac{dQ}{dt} = 2 - \frac{3Q}{60-t}
\frac{dQ}{dt} + \frac{3Q}{60-t} = 2
Well P(x) or P(t) in this case would be 3/(60-t), which when worked out would give me an integration factor of (60-t)^3.
You've "lost a sign". The negative in "60-t" will introduce a negative into the integral. The integrating factor is (60-t)-3.
I would eventually get:
Q\cdot (60-t)^3 = \int 2(60-t)^3
Q\cdot (60-t)^3 = \frac{(60-t)^4}{2} + C
Q = \frac{60-t}{2} + \frac{C}{(60-t)^3}
Before I go ahead and find a specific solution, is my general solution correct?
Wow. OK, so using the integrating factor (60-t)^-3:
Q\cdot (60-t)^{-3} = \int 2(60-t)^{-3}
Q\cdot (60-t)^{-3} = \frac{1}{(60-t)^2} + C
Q = -(60-t) + \frac{C}{(60-t)^{-3}}
Q = C\cdot(60-t)^{-3} - (60-t)
Using the initial values Q(0) = 0
I Get get C = 1/3600, which gives me a specific solution of:
Q = \frac{(60-t)^3}{3600} - (60-t)
Looks good?
And for part b), is that like finding the maxima of the function Q(t)?
HallsofIvy
Feb27-07, 12:44 PM
You've lost that same sign again!
Multiplying both sides by (60-t)3 does NOT change
\frac{1}{(60-t)^2}
to - (60-t)!
Your formula is
Q(t)= \frac{(60-t)^3}{3600}+ (60-t)
Yes, find when the "maximum amount of salt in the tank" is exactly like maximizing that function!
snoothie
Feb28-07, 02:40 AM
hi,
i'm working on a similar problem. i'm trying to figure out why it is (60-t) & not (60+t)...is it because the tank will empty out and we are calculating time backwards?
HallsofIvy
Feb28-07, 06:27 AM
Who is calculating time backwards? The tanks starts with 60 gallons of water in it and loses one gallon per minute: after 1 minute, 60- 1= 59 gallons, after 2 minutes 60- 2= 58 gallons, etc. until, after 60 minutes 60-60= 0 gallons and the tank is empty. The formula is 60- t because the tank is emptying- the water is going out. It it were 60+t, the tank would be getter "fuller"- water would be coming in.
snoothie
Feb28-07, 09:50 AM
thanks. i didnt understand the equation fully. was thinking that in graph it would be Q vs t ...
now i got it.
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