The molarity or molar concentration of a solution is given by the number of moles of solute divided by the volume of solution:
![C=\frac{n_{\text{solute}}}{V_{\text{solution}}}](https://img.qammunity.org/2023/formulas/chemistry/college/c41gxt2qrgdgq3izt0g3zri23qiao94ql1.png)
No solute was added when the solution was diluted, so the only terms that change are the concentration and the volume.
So, let 1 denote the situation before the dilution and 2 denote the situation after the dilution.
At first, we have concentration 1, volume 1 and number of moles 1:
![C_1=(n_1)/(V_1)_{}](https://img.qammunity.org/2023/formulas/chemistry/college/9wb7pekujft5oimpi2a7rodyx8gqxpgz7w.png)
After diluting, we have concentration 2, volume 2 and number of moles 2:
![C_2=(n_2)/(V_2)](https://img.qammunity.org/2023/formulas/chemistry/college/w4451qb2y12cabls9zvgyv96exi0a0daaq.png)
However, since no solute was added or removed, the number of moles before and after are the same:
![n_1=n_2](https://img.qammunity.org/2023/formulas/chemistry/college/jjryi7whcw81miezne3pcice3vs71w0q1r.png)
So, if we solve both equations for n, we have:
![\begin{gathered} C_1=(n_1)/(V_1)\Longrightarrow n_1=C_1V_1 \\ C_2=(n_2)/(V_2)\Longrightarrow n_2=c_2V_2 \end{gathered}](https://img.qammunity.org/2023/formulas/chemistry/college/7y1pbx4dopfpp74skmdff3n30h445xinq1.png)
So:
![\begin{gathered} n_1=n_2 \\ C_1V_1=C_2V_2 \end{gathered}](https://img.qammunity.org/2023/formulas/chemistry/college/dp49wws9m1pqqqdzguprxk0hfban5suz98.png)
The initial concentration and volume are:
![\begin{gathered} C_1=7.69M \\ V_1=43.3mL \end{gathered}](https://img.qammunity.org/2023/formulas/chemistry/college/vzrxqe2829eb450ln690ppoikfax3wnrjd.png)
And it was diluted to 137.6 mL, so this is the final volume:
![V_2=137.6mL](https://img.qammunity.org/2023/formulas/chemistry/college/go4jz97j0xqessvlnphisw369ne3zlxjsm.png)
Solving the equation we have to C2, we have:
![\begin{gathered} C_2=(C_1V_1)/(V_2) \\ C_2=(7.69M\cdot43.3mL)/(137.6mL)=(7.69\cdot43.3)/(137.6)M=2.41989\ldots M\approx2.42M \end{gathered}](https://img.qammunity.org/2023/formulas/chemistry/college/cnm5e26wrk006lawa6kwl7tg01ykarop2k.png)
So, the resulting molarity is approximately 2.42 M.