I'm having some trouble calculating the Ligand Field Stabilizing Energies of transition metals. The first thing I do is determine the oxidation state of the metal and then I input it in this equation:
LFSE = (# of t2g electrons)(.4) - (# of eg electrons)(.6)
Sometimes this works, like when I use it for Fe2+ when it is bound to a weak field ligand and creates a high spin complex.
I get: LFSE = (4 t2g electrons)(.4) - (2 eg electrons)(.6) = .4
It doesn't work for other atoms, like Co3+. When I use it for Co3+ (in a low spin state) I get 2.4 because there are no electrons in the eg orbitals. When I look it up in my book, the correct LFSE is 2.4-2P.
I know 2P is related to the energy pairing of electrons that destabilize the configuration but I don't know how it factors into the equation or how to calculate any LFSE that contains a 'P' term.
How do I know when to include a P term?