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25 August, 02:16

A scientist has two solutions, which she has labeled Solutuion A and Solution B. Each contains salt. She knows that Solutuion A is 65% salt and Solution B is 90% salt. She wants to obtain 110 ounces of a mixture that is 75% salt. How many ounces of each solution should she use?

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  1. 25 August, 03:34
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    a = amount (in oz) of solution A

    b = amount of solution B

    The scientist wants a mixture of 110 oz, so

    a + b = 110

    Solution A consists of 65% salt, so each ounce of solution A contributes 0.65 oz of salt; similarly, each ounce of B contributes 0.9 oz. The mixture is supposed to consist of 75% salt, which amounts to 0.75 * (110 oz) = 82.5 oz of salt. So

    0.65 a + 0.9 b = 82.5

    Solve for a and b:

    b = 110 - a

    0.65 a + 0.9 (110 - a) = 82.5

    0.65 a + 99 - 0.9 a = 82.5

    0.25 a = 16.5

    a = 66 = => b = 44
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