Answer:
Another eight cups of pure water will be required.
Step-by-step explanation:
Start by calculating the amount (in cups) of vinegar in these six cups:
- One cup of
vinegar-water solution would contain
cups of vinegar. - Two cups of
vinegar-water solution would contain
cups of vinegar. - Three cups of
vinegar-water solution would contain
cups of vinegar.
Therefore, if these six cups of solutions were mixed, the mixture would contain
cups of vinegar. Also, the mixture is supposed to have a volume of six cups. Therefore, the concentration of this six-cup mixture would be:
.
In other words, if these six cups of vinegar-water solutions are mixed, it would be necessary to dilute (by adding more water) before reaching the concentration of
.
The goal is to dilute this solution with
cups of vinegar to a concentration of
. Consider: what would be the volume the solution after dilution?
The volume of a solution can be found from the quantity and concentration of its solute:
- Quantity of vinegar in this solution:
cups. - Concentration of vinegar in this solution:
.
After dilution, the volume of this solution would be:
.
At this moment, this solution only has a volume of six cups. Therefore,
cups of pure water will be required.