Well I almost understand this question but still got stuck, I will show you the question and my answer so I need someone to tell me if I did it correctly or not and how I should fix it.

at 55degrees the K for the reaction: 2NO2(g)<=>N2O4 is 1.15
calc the concentration of N2O4 present in equilibrium with 0.50 mole of NO2

I first used the ICE chart then calculated
1.15 = x/(0.5-2x)^2
O.5-2x~ ).5
1.15 = x/(0.5)^2
1.15(0.25) = x
x= 0.2875
2(0.2875) - 0.575
Therefore N2O4 = 0.575M?

I don't agree that you can assume .5-2x is approximately .5. Your final answer shows that it is not.

1.15 = x/(0.5-2x)^2

(0.5-2x)^2= x/1.15

.25 -2x +4x^2= .696x

put the terms together, and use the quadratic equation for x.

then would my answer look like this

0.25-2.696x + 4x^2 = 0

and I would also like to understand how did you get 0.696?

I don't know how I got .696 . It should have been 1/1.15=.869

Now that you have the quadratic,

0.25-2.896x + 4x^2 = 0
Use the quadratic equation

x= (2.896 +- sqrt (8.23-4) )/8

x= .618
or x=.104

Now obviously, the first is impossible (why?), so the concentration the product is .104, and the concentration of the reactant is .5-.208

check my calc work

2 answers

0.2619
1.15=x/[2{0.5-x}]^2 u get x=0.9546 and x=0.2619 corrt anxw ix last 1