If the denominator is of the form \(a + \sqrt{b}\), we rationalise by multiplying top and bottom by the conjugate \(a - \sqrt{b}\). This removes the surd from the denominator and leaves a simplified expression:
Forgetting to use the conjugate — multiplying by \(a+\sqrt{b}\) again won’t remove the surd.
Incorrectly expanding the denominator — must use difference of squares.
Not simplifying numerator fully when possible.
Exam strategy
Always check if the denominator has a rational and a surd part.
Show multiplication by the conjugate clearly to get full marks.
Simplify the denominator to \(a^2 - b\), not leaving it expanded with surds.
Summary
When the denominator has both a number and a square root, rationalisation requires multiplying by the conjugate. This removes surds from the denominator and leaves an exact simplified fraction, which is standard GCSE practice.