The method that
Archit3110 used has a bunch of different names, but it's one of the best strategies out there for weighted averages! A really good way to use it is to visualize the concentrations of our original mixtures (30% and 50%) and the concentration of our final mixture (45%) on a number line:
<--30%---------------45%-----50%-->
Notice how the resulting concentration is much closer to 50% — this indicates that there is more of the 50% alcohol mixture than of the 30% alcohol mixture in the final 45% mixture.
At this point, we can definitively rule out E as an answer, as it would means we'd have more of the 30% alcohol mixture than the 55% alcohol mixture. But we can actually do more than that using ratios! 45% is 15% away from 30% vs. 5% away from 50%. In other words, the final concentration is 3 times as close to 50% than it is to 30% (as 15:5 = 3:1). This means that
there is 3 times as much of the 50% alcohol mixture than of the 30% alcohol mixture in the final mixture.
So the final alcohol mixture is 3 parts of the 50% mixture to 1 part of the 30% mixture, giving 4 parts total. There are 10 liters of the final 45% mixture in total, so each of the four parts is 10/4 = 2.5 liters. So the 1 part of the 30% mixture used is 2.5 liters, or answer choice B.
As shown by some of the other users here, this particular problem is pretty quick to solve using weighted averages equations, but this number line/ratio method is a great trick 1) if you aren't as comfortable building out the equations, 2) if you want to logically estimate/confirm your answer, or 3) when the numbers are a little uglier and harder to calculate as decimals.