I think my reply was deleted, but I added the source to the problem/info I quoted (GMAT Club)... which I think is an approved source?Thanks so much for the thorough response. I apologize for not explaining the formula better from the get go.
As you recommended, I do try not to be reliant on formulas or be set in particular ways when solving problems- it's something I'm trying to get better at. I also have a tendency to jump into the problem before looking at the answers to see if I can approximate and/or plug back it.
I guess I was trying to understand the formula/concept better by using it on a simple problem, like this one, so I could then apply it to a more complex mixture problem in the future.
I'll copy and paste the explanation of the formula/concept below along with another sample problem. I'm not disregarding what you said at all- so please don't interpret it that way. I'm just trying to figure out how to approach more complex mixture problems (I'm kind of scarred from my previous GMAT where I got a tough mixture problem and it totally threw me off and messed up my time management).
From GMAT ClubImportant Points to Remember:
1. When a fraction of a homogenous solution is removed, the percentage of either part does not change. If milk:water = 1:1 in initial solution, it remains 1:1 in the leftover solution.
2. When you add one component to a solution, the amount of the other component does not change. In milk and water solution, if you add water, amount of milk is still the same (not percentage but amount). If milk:water = 1:1 in 10 liters of solution, it means, milk = 5 liters and water = 5 liters. Now, if you add 2 liters of water, amount of water = 7 liters but amount of milk is still 5 liters. The percentage of milk has changed but the amount of milk is still the same.
3. Amount of A = Concentration of A * Volume of the mixture
Amount= C∗V
In a 10 liter mixture of milk and water, if milk is 50%, amount of milk = 50%*10 = 5 liter
When you add water to this solution, the amount of milk does not change (as discussed in point 2 above). The concentration of milk changes of course since the solution is diluted.
Amount of milk before addition = Amount of milk after addition
So Initial Concentration of milk * Initial Volume of solution = Final Concentration of milk * Final Volume of solution
Ci * Vi = Cf * Vf
Or
Cf = Ci * (Vi/Vf)
Remember, this is the relation between the initial and final concentration of milk since the amount of milk remains the same. The amount of water does not remain the same since more water is added. Hence, this relation does not hold for water.
Go through these points repeatedly till you are very comfortable with them!
Example 2: 10% of a 50% alcohol solution is replaced with water. From the resulting solution, again 10% is replaced with water. This step is repeated once more. What is the concentration of alcohol in the final solution obtained?
(A) 3%
(B) 20%
(C) 25%
(D) 36%
(E) 40%
Solution: In each step, we are replacing the solution with water. Every time we remove p% of the solution, the amount of alcohol goes down but the concentration of alcohol in the mixture remains the same (point 1 above). When we add water, the amount of alcohol remains the same.
Let’s try and perform the steps to see what happens:
Step 1: 10% of a 50% alcohol solution is removed – In the leftover solution, concentration of alcohol remains the same i.e. 50%. If initial volume of the solution was 10 liters, new volume is 9 liters.
Step 2: Water is added to the solution to replace the 10% shortfall – the concentration of alcohol changes now (but the amount of alcohol is still the same). Also, the volume of the solution is 10 liters again. In this new solution,
The concentration of alcohol after this step Cf1 = (50%)*(9/10) (using point 3)
Step 3: 10% of the solution with concentration of alcohol = Cf1 is removed – In the leftover solution, concentration of alcohol is still Cf1. The volume of the solution reduces to 9 liters again.
Step 4: Water is added to the solution to replace the 10% shortfall – The concentration of alcohol changes now. Also, the volume of the solution is 10 liters again. In this new solution,
The concentration of alcohol after this step Cf2 = Cf1*(9/10) = (50%)*(9/10) *(9/10)
Step 5: 10% of the solution with concentration of alcohol = Cf2 is removed – In the leftover solution, concentration of alcohol is still Cf2. The volume of the solution reduces to 9 liters again.
Step 6: Water is added to the solution to replace the 10% shortfall – The concentration of alcohol changes now. Also, the volume of the solution is 10 liters again. In this new solution,
The concentration of alcohol after this final step Cf3 = Cf2*(9/10) = 0.5*(9/10) *(9/10) *(9/10)
The concentration changes only when water is added. Each time water is added, the concentration becomes (9/10)th of the previous concentration.
Final concentration of alcohol = (50%)∗(910)∗(910)∗(910)=36.45%
After going through that again, I'm pretty sure that's only for replacement/removal.
The particular problem I cited, was an addition. And looking back, I could have gone with the "see-saw method" with weighted averages.
10% on the left, 100% on the right, and 20% in between for the final solution. Which would have ultimately led to a ratio of 8:1:9... and then 5L of the 100% solution.
Obviously not as quick as doing it intuitively like you mentioned, but I was just trying to understand the actual concept so I can apply it to more complex problems.