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Problem Solving And Data Analysis · Percentages And Unit Conversions

SAT Percentages And Unit Conversions Practice Questions (Free + Explanations) | Quiz 6

Question 12345 of 5

Question 1 of 5

A laboratory solution is acid by volume. After liters of pure water are added, the solution is acid by volume. What was the original volume, in liters, of the solution?

Explanation

Let the original volume be liters. Since the solution was originally acid, the amount of acid was liters. Adding liters of pure water does not change the amount of acid, so the new total volume is and the acid amount is still . The new solution is acid, so

Now solve:

So the original volume was liters.

Concept summary

When a solution is diluted with pure water, the amount of solute stays the same while the total volume changes, so set the original solute amount equal to the new percent of the new total volume.

Question 2 of 5

A machine uses gallons of coolant every hours. If the same rate is expressed in liters per day, which of the following is equivalent? (Use gallon liters.)

Explanation

First convert the rate from gallons per hours to gallons per hour: gallons per hour. Then convert gallons to liters: liters per hour. Finally, convert hours to days: liters per day. Therefore, the equivalent rate is liters per day.

Concept summary

To rewrite a rate in an equivalent form, convert one unit at a time and keep track of both the quantity unit and the time unit.

Question 3 of 5

A graph shows the relationship between distance and elevation on a hiking trail. The line passes through the points and , where is distance in miles and is elevation in feet. Based on this graph, what is the percent increase in elevation for each additional mile of the trail, relative to the elevation at 2 miles?

Explanation

From to , the elevation increases by feet over miles. So the increase is feet per mile. The question asks for the percent increase per mile relative to the elevation at 2 miles, which is 900 feet. That percent is . Therefore, the correct answer is .

Concept summary

Find the rate of change from the graph first, then convert that rate to a percent by comparing it to the given reference value.

Question 4 of 5

A chemist needs to prepare 500 milliliters of a solution that is 18% acid. She has one solution that is 10% acid and another that is 25% acid. If is the number of milliliters of the 10% solution and is the number of milliliters of the 25% solution, what is the value of ?

Explanation

Let be the amount of 10% solution and be the amount of 25% solution. The total volume is 500 mL, so

The total amount of pure acid must be 18% of 500, which is

The acid from the two solutions gives the second equation:

Now substitute into the acid equation:

So the number of milliliters of the 10% solution is .

Concept summary

For mixture problems, write one equation for total amount and another for the amount of the substance being tracked, using percent as a decimal.

Question 5 of 5

A backpack was marked down by during a sale. A store coupon then took an additional off the sale price. Which statement must be true about the final price of the backpack compared with its original price?

Explanation

Let the original price be . After a discount, the price is . Then taking off that sale price gives . So the final price is of the original price. That means choice D must be true. Equivalently, the total decrease is .

Concept summary

Successive percent changes are handled by multiplying decimal factors. A discount of means multiply by in decimal form.

Your results

0of 5 correct

Estimated SAT Math band

500-550

Illustrative range from this short quiz—not an official College Board score.

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Your results

1of 5 correct

Estimated SAT Math band

500-550

Illustrative range from this short quiz—not an official College Board score.

Adaptive practice, weak-area review, and timed tests live in the MCQsLearn app—pick up where you left off on your phone.

More SAT Math practice

Your results

2of 5 correct

Estimated SAT Math band

600-650

Illustrative range from this short quiz—not an official College Board score.

Adaptive practice, weak-area review, and timed tests live in the MCQsLearn app—pick up where you left off on your phone.

More SAT Math practice

Your results

3of 5 correct

Estimated SAT Math band

600-650

Illustrative range from this short quiz—not an official College Board score.

Adaptive practice, weak-area review, and timed tests live in the MCQsLearn app—pick up where you left off on your phone.

More SAT Math practice

Your results

4of 5 correct

Estimated SAT Math band

700+

Illustrative range from this short quiz—not an official College Board score.

Adaptive practice, weak-area review, and timed tests live in the MCQsLearn app—pick up where you left off on your phone.

More SAT Math practice

Your results

5of 5 correct

Estimated SAT Math band

700+

Illustrative range from this short quiz—not an official College Board score.

Adaptive practice, weak-area review, and timed tests live in the MCQsLearn app—pick up where you left off on your phone.

More SAT Math practice