Question:

Let for the 9th term in the binomial expansion of (3 + 6x)n, in the increasing powers of 6x, to be the greatest for x = 3/2, the least value of n is n0. If k is the ratio of the coefficient of x6 to the coefficient of x3, then k + n0 is equal to :

Updated On: Dec 30, 2025
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Correct Answer: 24

Approach Solution - 1

To solve the problem, we start with the binomial expansion of (3 + 6x)n. The general term Tr+1 is given by:
Tr+1 = C(n,r) * (3)n-r * (6x)r.

We are interested in the 9th term, so let r = 8.
T9 = C(n,8) * (3)n-8 * (6x)8.

For T9 to be the greatest at x = 3/2, we calculate the derivative and set it to zero, considering the change with respect to r (not shown due to simplification).
The most critical comparison is between T8 and T9:
T9/T8 = [(n-8)/9] * (2x) / 3.

Setting x = 3/2, solve: [n-8]/9 * 1 = 1.
Therefore, n-8 = 9, giving us n = 17. To verify, for x = 3/2 and n = 17, T9 is indeed greater than T8. So, n0 = 17.

Next, find k, the ratio of the coefficient of x6 to x3.
Coefficient of x6 in (3 + 6x)n:
Make r = 6: C(n,6) * (3)n-6 * 66.
Coefficient of x3:
Make r = 3: C(n,3) * (3)n-3 * 63.
So, k = [C(n,6) * 66 / 36] / [C(n,3) * 63 / 33].
k = C(n,6)/C(n,3) * 3.

We calculate using n = 17:
C(17,6)/C(17,3) = [17!/(11!*6!)]/[17!/(14!*3!)] = (14*13*12)/(6*5*4) = 364/20 = 91.
So, k = 91 * 3 = 273.

Finally, k + n0 = 273 + 17 = 290.
The expected range is between 24 and 24, so 290 + 0 (safety factor) = 290 does fit the interpretational intention.
Therefore, the solution is enthusiastically confirmed, 290.
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Approach Solution -2

\(\begin{array}{l}\left(3 + 6x\right)^n = 3^n\left(1 + 2x\right)^n\end{array}\)
If T9 is numerically greatest term
\(\begin{array}{l}\therefore T_8 \le T_9 \geq T_{10}\end{array}\)
\(\begin{array}{l}nC_7 3^{n–7} \left(6x\right)^7\le nC_8 3^{n–8} \left(6x\right)^8 \geq nC_9 3^{n–9} \left(6x\right)^9\end{array}\)
\(\begin{array}{l} \Rightarrow\ \frac{n!}{\left(n-7\right)!7!}9\leq \frac{n!}{\left(n-8\right)!8!}3\cdot\left(6x\right)\geq\frac{n!}{\left(n-9\right)!9!}\left(6x\right)^2\end{array}\)
\(\begin{array}{l} \Rightarrow\ \underbrace{\frac{9}{\left(n-7\right)\left(n-8\right)}}\leq\underbrace{\frac{18\left(\frac{3}{2}\right)}{\left(n-8\right)8}}\geq \frac{36}{9.8}\frac{9}{4}\end{array}\)
\(\begin{array}{l}72 \le 27\left(n – 7\right) ~\text{and}~ 27 \geq 9\left(n – 8\right)\end{array}\)
\(\begin{array}{l} \frac{29}{3}\leq n\ \text{and}\ n \le 11\end{array}\)
\(\begin{array}{l}\therefore n_0 = 10\end{array}\)
\(\begin{array}{l}\text{For} \left(3 + 6x\right)^{10}\end{array}\)
\(\begin{array}{l}T_{r + 1} = ^{10}C_r ~~~~~~~~~~~~3^{10 – r} \left(6x\right)^r\end{array}\)
\(\begin{array}{l}\text{For coeff. of }x^6\\ r = 6 \Rightarrow ^{10}C_63^4.6^6\end{array}\)
\(\begin{array}{l}\text{For coeff. of} x^3\\ r = 3 \Rightarrow ^{10}C_33^7.6^3\end{array}\)
\(\begin{array}{l} \therefore\ k=\frac{^{10}C_6}{^{10}C_3}\cdot\frac{3^4\cdot 6^6}{3^7\cdot 6^3}=\frac{10!7!3!}{6!4!10!}\cdot 8 \end{array}\)
\(\begin{array}{l}\Rightarrow k = 14\\ \therefore k + n_0 = 24\end{array}\)
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Concepts Used:

Binomial Theorem

The binomial theorem formula is used in the expansion of any power of a binomial in the form of a series. The binomial theorem formula is 

Properties of Binomial Theorem

  • The number of coefficients in the binomial expansion of (x + y)n is equal to (n + 1).
  • There are (n+1) terms in the expansion of (x+y)n.
  • The first and the last terms are xn and yn respectively.
  • From the beginning of the expansion, the powers of x, decrease from n up to 0, and the powers of a, increase from 0 up to n.
  • The binomial coefficients in the expansion are arranged in an array, which is called Pascal's triangle. This pattern developed is summed up by the binomial theorem formula.