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14 April, 15:03

In the lab, deandre has two solutions that contain alcohol and is mixing them with each other. He uses 3 times as much solution A as solution B. Solution A is 12% alcohol and solution B is 19% alcohol. How many millimeters of solution B does he use, if the resulting mixture has 330 millimeters of pure alcohol?

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  1. 14 April, 18:08
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    a = amount of solution A used

    b = amount of solution B used

    a + b = 330 (mL, not mm)

    Each mL of x% alcohol solution contributes x/100 mL of alcohol; in order to end up with a mixture that is pure alcohol, all 330 mL of the mix needs to be alcohol:

    0.12a + 0.19b = 330

    Deandre uses 3 times as much of solution A as he does of solution B, so that

    3a = b

    in which case

    a + 3a = 330 = => 4a = 330 = => a = 82.5 = => b = 247.5

    But

    0.12a + 0.19b = 56.925 ≠ 330
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