Does anyone have any notes on mcat math? For example, finding the antilog of 3.82without a calculator? I have tried leah4sci videos, but I am not understanding.
I recommend understanding math shortcuts using logs, and memorizing the logs of 1,2,3,5,7. From there it's easy to do the math to find the others.
Log(1) = 0 of course.
Log(2) = 0.3
Log(3) = 0.477
Log(5) = 0.7
Log(7) = .85
What if we wanted to find log(6)
Well log(a*b) = log(a) + log(b) right?
So log(6) = log(2*3) = log(2) + log(3) = 0.3 + 0.477 = 0.777
Also helpful to know:
Anti-log of 0.5 is 3.16
Log(1/n) = log(1) - logn = 0 - logn
So log(1/2) = -.3 (opposite of above)
Lnn = e*logn where e ~ 2.3
So ln(2)=2.3*log(2)= 2.3*.3 = 0.69
Let's try and calculate the [H+] of a solution that is pH = 4.5
log(H+) = -4.5
[H+] antilog -4.5
Hmm what could we do here? Well we know anti-log of 0.5 is 3.16. So actually
1*10^-4.5 = 3.16 * 10^-5
What if we wanted to calculate the pH of a solution that has [H+] = 7*10^-4
Long way:
-Log(7*10^-4) = -log(7) + -log(10^-4)
= -0.85 + 4 = 3.15
Shortcut:
pH = 4-log(7) = 4-0.85 = 3.15
The other quick shortcut to know is that if [H+] is under 3.16 * 10^-5 for example, then your pH is going to be between 4.5 and 5.
If [H+] is over 3.16 * 10^-5, then your pH is going to be between 4 and 4.5.
This holds true for 3.16 * 10^-whatever