Unit 7.8 – Exponential Models with Differential Equations

AP® Calculus AB & BC | Real-World Applications of Exponential Growth and Decay

Why This Matters: Exponential models are everywhere in the real world! From population growth to radioactive decay, from compound interest to cooling coffee—the differential equation \(\frac{dy}{dt} = ky\) is THE most important DE in applications. This topic brings together everything you've learned: modeling, solving, and interpreting. It's tested extensively on AP® exams and is crucial for science, engineering, economics, and medicine. Master exponential models and you'll understand how calculus explains the natural world!

🎯 The Fundamental Exponential Model

The Exponential Growth/Decay Model

THE DIFFERENTIAL EQUATION:

\[ \frac{dy}{dt} = ky \]
General Solution:
\[ y(t) = y_0 e^{kt} \]

Where:

  • \(y(t)\) = quantity at time \(t\)
  • \(y_0\) = initial quantity (at \(t = 0\))
  • \(k\) = growth/decay constant
  • \(e\) = Euler's number ≈ 2.71828

Understanding the Constant \(k\):

  • If \(k > 0\): EXPONENTIAL GROWTH
    • Population increasing, money growing, spreading disease
  • If \(k < 0\): EXPONENTIAL DECAY
    • Radioactive decay, cooling, drug elimination
  • If \(k = 0\): No change (constant)

📐 Deriving the Solution

Derivation using Separation of Variables:

Start with: \(\frac{dy}{dt} = ky\)

Separate:

\[ \frac{1}{y} \, dy = k \, dt \]

Integrate:

\[ \ln|y| = kt + C \]

Solve for \(y\):

\[ y = Ae^{kt} \]

where \(A = \pm e^C\)

Apply initial condition \(y(0) = y_0\):

\[ y_0 = Ae^{0} = A \]

Therefore: \(A = y_0\)

FINAL SOLUTION: \(y(t) = y_0 e^{kt}\)

🔍 Finding the Growth/Decay Constant k

Methods for Finding k

Method 1: Given a data point

If you know \(y(t_1) = y_1\) for some time \(t_1\):

\[ y_1 = y_0 e^{kt_1} \]
\[ \frac{y_1}{y_0} = e^{kt_1} \]
\[ \ln\left(\frac{y_1}{y_0}\right) = kt_1 \]
\[ k = \frac{1}{t_1}\ln\left(\frac{y_1}{y_0}\right) \]
Method 2: Given growth/decay rate

If told "grows at 5% per year":

\(k = 0.05\) (for continuous growth)

Method 3: From half-life or doubling time

See formulas below

⏱️ Half-Life and Doubling Time

SPECIAL TIME PERIODS

Half-Life (for decay, \(k < 0\)):

Definition: Time for quantity to reduce to half its value

\[ t_{1/2} = \frac{\ln 2}{|k|} = \frac{0.693}{|k|} \]

Or, if half-life is given, find \(k\):

\[ k = -\frac{\ln 2}{t_{1/2}} \]
Doubling Time (for growth, \(k > 0\)):

Definition: Time for quantity to double

\[ t_{\text{double}} = \frac{\ln 2}{k} = \frac{0.693}{k} \]

Or, if doubling time is given, find \(k\):

\[ k = \frac{\ln 2}{t_{\text{double}}} \]

🌍 Common Applications

Application 1: Population Growth

Problem: A bacteria population has 1000 cells initially. After 3 hours, there are 8000 cells. Find the exponential model and determine when the population reaches 50,000.

Given:

  • \(y_0 = 1000\) (initial population)
  • \(y(3) = 8000\) (after 3 hours)

Find k:

\[ 8000 = 1000e^{3k} \]
\[ 8 = e^{3k} \]
\[ \ln 8 = 3k \]
\[ k = \frac{\ln 8}{3} \approx 0.693 \text{ per hour} \]

Model:

\[ y(t) = 1000e^{0.693t} \]

Find when \(y = 50000\):

\[ 50000 = 1000e^{0.693t} \]
\[ 50 = e^{0.693t} \]
\[ \ln 50 = 0.693t \]
\[ t = \frac{\ln 50}{0.693} \approx 5.64 \text{ hours} \]

Application 2: Radioactive Decay

Problem: Carbon-14 has a half-life of 5730 years. If a sample starts with 100 grams, how much remains after 10,000 years?

Find k from half-life:

\[ k = -\frac{\ln 2}{5730} \approx -0.000121 \text{ per year} \]

Model:

\[ y(t) = 100e^{-0.000121t} \]

Find \(y(10000)\):

\[ y(10000) = 100e^{-0.000121(10000)} \approx 29.4 \text{ grams} \]

Application 3: Compound Interest (Continuous)

Problem: $5000 is invested at 6% annual interest compounded continuously. How much after 10 years?

Given:

  • \(y_0 = 5000\) (principal)
  • \(k = 0.06\) (6% = 0.06)
  • \(t = 10\) years

Calculate:

\[ y(10) = 5000e^{0.06(10)} = 5000e^{0.6} \approx 9110.59 \]

Answer: $9,110.59

📋 Problem-Solving Strategy

Step-by-Step Approach

Systematic Method:

  1. Identify the model: Recognize it's exponential (\(\frac{dy}{dt} = ky\))
  2. Write general form: \(y(t) = y_0 e^{kt}\)
  3. Find \(y_0\): Initial value (often given directly)
  4. Find \(k\): Use given information:
    • Data point: solve \(y_1 = y_0 e^{kt_1}\) for \(k\)
    • Half-life: \(k = -\frac{\ln 2}{t_{1/2}}\)
    • Doubling time: \(k = \frac{\ln 2}{t_{\text{double}}}\)
    • Rate: \(k\) = rate (as decimal)
  5. Write specific model: Substitute \(y_0\) and \(k\)
  6. Answer the question: Evaluate or solve as needed
  7. Check reasonableness: Does answer make sense?

📊 Essential Formulas Summary

Complete Formula Reference

Exponential Model Formulas
Formula Use
\(\frac{dy}{dt} = ky\) Differential equation (the model)
\(y(t) = y_0 e^{kt}\) General solution
\(k = \frac{1}{t_1}\ln\left(\frac{y_1}{y_0}\right)\) Finding \(k\) from data point
\(t_{1/2} = \frac{\ln 2}{|k|}\) Half-life from \(k\)
\(k = -\frac{\ln 2}{t_{1/2}}\) Finding \(k\) from half-life
\(t_{\text{double}} = \frac{\ln 2}{k}\) Doubling time from \(k\)
\(k = \frac{\ln 2}{t_{\text{double}}}\) Finding \(k\) from doubling time

💡 Essential Tips & Strategies

✅ Success Strategies:

  • Identify the type: Growth (\(k > 0\)) or decay (\(k < 0\))?
  • Units matter: Keep track of time units (hours, years, etc.)
  • Initial value at \(t = 0\): Simplifies to \(y(0) = y_0\)
  • \(\ln 2 \approx 0.693\): Useful for half-life/doubling problems
  • Check your k: Positive for growth, negative for decay
  • When solving for t: Take natural log of both sides
  • Calculator efficiency: Store intermediate values

🔥 Common Shortcuts:

  • Quick half-life check: After \(n\) half-lives, \(y = y_0 \left(\frac{1}{2}\right)^n\)
  • Quick doubling check: After \(n\) doublings, \(y = y_0 (2)^n\)
  • Continuous vs discrete: Continuous uses \(e^{kt}\), discrete uses \((1+r)^t\)
  • Percentage to decimal: 5% = 0.05
  • When \(y = 2y_0\): \(t = \frac{\ln 2}{k}\) (doubling time)

❌ Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Mistake 1: Using wrong sign for \(k\) (decay should be negative)
  • Mistake 2: Confusing discrete and continuous models
  • Mistake 3: Not converting percentages to decimals
  • Mistake 4: Using wrong time units (mixing years and days)
  • Mistake 5: Forgetting initial condition (\(y_0\) must be at \(t = 0\))
  • Mistake 6: Arithmetic errors with logarithms
  • Mistake 7: Not checking if answer makes sense
  • Mistake 8: Using \(e^{-kt}\) when problem says growth
  • Mistake 9: Confusing half-life formula with doubling time
  • Mistake 10: Not labeling units in final answer

📝 Practice Problems

Solve these problems:

  1. A population grows from 500 to 2000 in 4 years. Find the exponential model.
  2. A substance has a half-life of 20 days. How long until 25% remains?
  3. Money doubles in 12 years with continuous compounding. What's the annual rate?
  4. If \(\frac{dy}{dt} = 0.08y\) and \(y(0) = 100\), find \(y(10)\).

Answers:

  1. \(y(t) = 500e^{0.347t}\) where \(k = \frac{\ln 4}{4}\)
  2. 40 days (two half-lives)
  3. 5.78% per year (k = ln 2 / 12 ≈ 0.0578)
  4. \(y(10) = 100e^{0.8} \approx 222.55\)

✏️ AP® Exam Success Tips

What AP® Graders Look For:

  • Identify the model: State that it's exponential growth/decay
  • Write the DE: \(\frac{dy}{dt} = ky\) (if asked)
  • Show finding k: Don't just state it, show calculation
  • Write complete model: \(y(t) = y_0 e^{kt}\) with values
  • Show work for final answer: All substitutions and calculations
  • Include units: In context problems
  • Interpret answer: What does it mean in context?

💯 Exam Strategy:

  1. Read problem carefully—identify what type (growth/decay)
  2. Write down what you know: \(y_0\), data points, half-life, etc.
  3. Find \(k\) using appropriate method
  4. Write specific model with numerical values
  5. Answer the question asked (don't stop at finding the model)
  6. Check: Does your answer make sense?
  7. Include units and interpret in context

⚡ Quick Reference Guide

EXPONENTIAL MODEL ESSENTIALS

The Model:

\[ \frac{dy}{dt} = ky \quad \Rightarrow \quad y(t) = y_0 e^{kt} \]

Key Concepts:

  • \(k > 0\): Growth (population, interest)
  • \(k < 0\): Decay (radioactive, cooling)
  • Half-life: \(t_{1/2} = \frac{\ln 2}{|k|}\)
  • Doubling: \(t_{\text{double}} = \frac{\ln 2}{k}\)
  • Finding k: \(k = \frac{1}{t_1}\ln\left(\frac{y_1}{y_0}\right)\)

Master Exponential Models! The differential equation \(\frac{dy}{dt} = ky\) models exponential growth (\(k > 0\)) and decay (\(k < 0\)). The solution is \(y(t) = y_0 e^{kt}\) where \(y_0\) is the initial value at \(t = 0\). To solve problems: (1) identify the model type, (2) find \(y_0\) from initial conditions, (3) find \(k\) from given information using \(k = \frac{1}{t_1}\ln\left(\frac{y_1}{y_0}\right)\), half-life \(k = -\frac{\ln 2}{t_{1/2}}\), doubling time \(k = \frac{\ln 2}{t_{\text{double}}}\), or rate directly, (4) write complete model, (5) answer the question. Common applications: population growth, radioactive decay, continuous compound interest, Newton's Law of Cooling. Remember \(\ln 2 \approx 0.693\). Always check sign of \(k\)—positive for growth, negative for decay. Include units and interpret answers in context. After one half-life, 50% remains; after two half-lives, 25% remains. This is THE most tested application topic on AP® exams—appears every year! 🎯✨