Algebra Problem: Adding Water to 75% Pure Alcohol to Make 15% Mixture

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To determine how much water to add to a gallon of 75% pure alcohol to achieve a 15% mixture, the formula 0.75/(n+1)=0.15 is used, where n represents the gallons of water added. This equation is derived from the principle that the total amount of alcohol remains constant across the mixtures. A more intuitive formulation is 1 * 0.75 = (n+1) * 0.15, which equates the absolute alcohol content in both mixtures. The concentration of water, C2, is 0% since pure water contains no alcohol. Understanding these relationships helps clarify the problem-solving process for mixing solutions.
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How much water must be added to a gallon of alcohol 75% pure to make a mixture 15% pure ?


The book I'm reading has given this formula : 0.75/(n+1)= 0.15 while n is the number of gallons to be added.
I don't understand where the heck the formula comes from :confused:
Can you help me with this problem ?
Thanks
 
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1 * 0.75 = (n+1) * 0.15 seems like a more understandable form to me.

basically, above sais that the (absolute) amount of alcohol is the same in both mixtures.
 
That formula comes from this one--a more general form:

C_f(V_1+V_2+\cdots+V_n)=C_1V_1+C_2V_2+\cdots+C_nV_n

Where C is concentration and V is volume.

Now, using you original numbers I can do this:

15\%(1gal+V_2)=75\%(1gal)+0\%V_2

Which can be rewritten into the form you first asked about:

.15=\frac{.75}{1gal+V_2}

Hope this helped. Good luck.
 
15\%(1gal+V_2)=75\%(1gal)+0\%V_2



It clears things up, but what is c_2 ?
Thanks
 
C2 is 0% because pure water has 0% alcohol.
 
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