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Real-Life Math

You are an art restorer. You have just opened your own business, and you are working on your first treatment. You are restoring a portrait of a grandfather for your client's family. The portrait looks faded due to the dust and dirt that has collected over the years, and the paint pigments look dull.

To restore the painting to its original splendor, you will have to completely refurbish and clean the portrait.

Before you can repair the rip, fill in the cracks and retouch the dulled paint pigments, you will have to clean the painting first. You take the portrait off its backboard and frame and place it on your table.

You will have to be very careful when you are preparing chemicals to treat the portrait because they are very powerful. In the wrong amounts, the chemicals could destroy the painting that you are trying to clean. For this reason, you will have to use some math skills.

"Math is not a large component of the normal day for an art restorer, but it is not absent," says restorer Sarah Spafford-Ricci.

"You will have to calculate solute and solvent combinations, and other simple calculations are required when we mix cleaning solutions and consolidates together."

Before you can start with the restoration treatment, you will have to calculate the concentration of cleaning solvent and water you are going to use.

You estimate that a gallon of treatment solution will do the trick. The cleaning solvent you have comes pre-mixed at 12 percent; however, you want to reduce the concentration to 5 percent. How much water and cleaning solvent do you mix to get the 5 percent solution?

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