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question 2 (5 points)
what is significant about the geometric dilution process? how is it similar to \doubling\.
Geometric dilution (used in pharmacy, e.g., mixing potent drugs) involves adding a diluent in a geometric ratio (e.g., 1:1, then 2:1 total, etc.) to ensure uniform mixing. It’s similar to “doubling” as both involve multiplicative growth/expansion: geometric dilution scales the mixture volume multiplicatively (each step’s total is a multiple of prior), like doubling (each step is 2× the previous). Significance: ensures homogeneous distribution of potent substances, critical for accuracy in compounding.
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Geometric dilution (used in pharmacy/compounding) ensures uniform mixing of potent substances (e.g., drugs) by adding diluent in geometric - ratio steps (e.g., mixing a small amount of active with diluent, then incorporating that mixture into more diluent, with each step’s total volume being a multiple of the prior). It is similar to “doubling” as both involve multiplicative change: geometric dilution scales the mixture volume multiplicatively (e.g., starting with volume \( V \), then \( 2V \), \( 4V \), etc., as diluent is added in geometric proportions), just as “doubling” means each quantity is \( 2\times \) the previous (e.g., \( x, 2x, 4x, \dots \)). The significance of geometric dilution is its ability to produce a homogeneous mixture, which is vital for accurate dosing (e.g., in pharmaceutical compounding, where uneven distribution of a potent drug could cause under/over - dosing).