Doing some math I came up to this expression, where $d,\epsilon>0$ \begin{equation} \left(1+\frac{d}{2}+{\epsilon}d\right)^{20} <\left(1+\frac{d}{2}-{\epsilon}d\right)^{21} \end{equation} Since for $\epsilon\rightarrow 0$ it holds, for every fixed $d>0$ one can find an enough small $\epsilon$ such that this inequality holds.
I'm curious if there is a closed form expressing $\epsilon$ as a function of $d$ for which the inequality holds, in other words a function $\epsilon(d)$ such that \begin{equation} \left(1+\frac{d}{2}+d\cdot{\epsilon(d)}\right)^{20} <\left(1+\frac{d}{2}-d\cdot{\epsilon(d)}\right)^{21} \end{equation} holds for every $d>0$.
I guess it could be something like \begin{equation} \epsilon(d)= \begin{cases} \frac{1}{d^c+c}& \text{if }d\geqslant 1\\ d^c&\text{if }d< 1 \end{cases} \end{equation} for $c$ big enough, and with the aid of a mathematical software it could be determined explicitly, but I have no experience in using them.
Maybe, am I missing some straightforward manipulations?