How do you find the derivative of #3e^ (-3/x)#? Calculus Basic Differentiation Rules Chain Rule 1 Answer Eddie Jun 29, 2016 #= 9/x^2 e^ (-3/x)# Explanation: #d/dx 3e^ (-3/x)# a few thoughts first #d/dx alpha f(x) = alpha d/dx f(x) # and #d/dx e^{g(x)} = g'(x) e^{g(x))# by the chain rule so here we can say that #d/dx 3e^ (-3/x)# #= 3 d/dx e^ (-3/x)# #= 3 d/dx (- 3/x) e^ (-3/x)# #= 3 d/dx (- 3x^{-1}) e^ (-3/x)# #= 3 (-1) (- 3x^{-1-1}) e^ (-3/x)# by the power rule #= 3 * 3x^{-2} e^ (-3/x)# #= 9/x^2 e^ (-3/x)# Answer link Related questions What is the Chain Rule for derivatives? How do you find the derivative of #y= 6cos(x^2)# ? How do you find the derivative of #y=6 cos(x^3+3)# ? How do you find the derivative of #y=e^(x^2)# ? How do you find the derivative of #y=ln(sin(x))# ? How do you find the derivative of #y=ln(e^x+3)# ? How do you find the derivative of #y=tan(5x)# ? How do you find the derivative of #y= (4x-x^2)^10# ? How do you find the derivative of #y= (x^2+3x+5)^(1/4)# ? How do you find the derivative of #y= ((1+x)/(1-x))^3# ? See all questions in Chain Rule Impact of this question 2916 views around the world You can reuse this answer Creative Commons License