Mao-Hua Li
Xiamen University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Mao-Hua Li.
ACS Nano | 2014
Xiang Wang; Mao-Hua Li; Lingyan Meng; Kaiqiang Lin; Jia-Min Feng; Tengxiang Huang; Zhilin Yang; Bin Ren
Wide applications of surface plasmon resonance rely on the in-depth understanding of the near-field distribution over a metallic nanostructure. However, precisely locating the strongest electric field in a metallic nanostructure still remains a great challenge in experiments because the field strength decays exponentially from the surface. Here, we demonstrate that the hot spot position for gold nanoparticles over a metal film can be precisely located using surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) by rationally choosing the probe molecules and excitation wavelengths. The finite difference time domain simulation verifies the experimental results and further reveals that the enhancement for the above system is sensitive to the distance between nanoparticles and the metal film but insensitive to the distance of nanoparticles. On the basis of this finding, we propose and demonstrate an approach of using a nanoparticles-on-metal film substrate as a uniform SERS substrate. This work provides a convenient way to probe the location of strong near-field enhancement with SERS and will have important implications in both surface analysis and surface plasmonics.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
Zhi-Cong Zeng; Sheng-Chao Huang; De-Yin Wu; Lingyan Meng; Mao-Hua Li; Tengxiang Huang; Jin-Hui Zhong; Xiang Wang; Zhilin Yang; Bin Ren
Interfacial properties are highly important to the performance of some energy-related systems. The in-depth understanding of the interface requires highly sensitive in situ techniques that can provide fingerprint molecular information at nanometer resolution. We developed an electrochemical tip-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (EC-TERS) by introduction of the light horizontally to the EC-STM cell to minimize the optical distortion and to keep the TERS measurement under a well-controlled condition. We obtained potential-dependent EC-TERS from the adsorbed aromatic molecule on a Au(111) surface and observed a substantial change in the molecule configuration with potential as a result of the protonation and deprotonation of the molecule. Such a change was not observable in EC-SERS (surface-enhanced), indicating EC-TERS can more faithfully reflect the fine interfacial structure than EC-SERS. This work will open a new era for using EC-TERS as an important nanospectroscopy tool for the molecular level and nanoscale analysis of some important electrochemical systems including solar cells, lithium ion batteries, fuel cells, and corrosion.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Jin-Hui Zhong; Jie Zhang; Xi Jin; Jun-Yang Liu; Qiongyu Li; Mao-Hua Li; Weiwei Cai; De-Yin Wu; Dongping Zhan; Bin Ren
Improving electrochemical activity of graphene is crucial for its various applications, which requires delicate control over its geometric and electronic structures. We demonstrate that precise control of the density of vacancy defects, introduced by Ar(+) irradiation, can improve and finely tune the heterogeneous electron transfer (HET) rate of graphene. For reliable comparisons, we made patterns with different defect densities on a same single layer graphene sheet, which allows us to correlate defect density (via Raman spectroscopy) with HET rate (via scanning electrochemical microscopy) of graphene quantitatively, under exactly the same experimental conditions. By balancing the defect induced increase of density of states (DOS) and decrease of conductivity, the optimal HET rate is attained at a moderate defect density, which is in a critical state; that is, the whole graphene sheet becomes electronically activated and, meanwhile, maintains structural integrity. The improved electrochemical activity can be understood by a high DOS near the Fermi level of defective graphene, as revealed by ab initio simulation, which enlarges the overlap between the electronic states of graphene and the redox couple. The results are valuable to promote the performance of graphene-based electrochemical devices. Furthermore, our findings may serve as a guide to tailor the structure and properties of graphene and other ultrathin two-dimensional materials through defect density engineering.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2015
Zhi-Cong Zeng; Sheng-Chao Huang; Tengxiang Huang; Mao-Hua Li; Bin Ren
Tip-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (TERS) can not only provide very high sensitivity but also high spatial resolution, and has found applications in various fields, including surface science, materials, and biology. Most of previous TERS studies were performed in air or in the ultrahigh vacuum. If TERS study can be performed in the electrochemical environment, the electronic properties of the surface can be well controlled so that the interaction of the molecules with the substrate and the configuration of the molecules on the surface can also be well controlled. However, the EC-TERS is not just a simple combination of electrochemistry with TERS, or the combination of EC-STM with Raman. It is a merge of STM, electrochemistry and Raman spectroscopy, and the mutual interference among these techniques makes the EC-TERS particularly challenge: the light distortion in EC system, the sensitivity, the tip coating to work under EC-STM and retain the TERS activity and cleanliness. We designed a special spectroelectrochemical cell to eliminate the distortion of the liquid layer to the optical path and obtain TER spectra of reasonably good signal to noise ratio for surface adsorbed molecules under electrochemical potential control. For example, potential dependent TERS signal have been obtained for adsorbed aromatic thiol molecule, and much obvious signal change compared with SERS has been found, manifesting the importance of EC-TERS to reveal the interfacial structure of an electrochemical system. We further extended EC-TERS to electrochemical redox system, and clear dependence of the species during redox reaction can be identified.
Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2015
Tengxiang Huang; Sheng-Chao Huang; Mao-Hua Li; Zhi-Cong Zeng; Xiang Wang; Bin Ren
Chemical Society Reviews | 2017
Xiang Wang; Sheng-Chao Huang; Tengxiang Huang; Hai-Sheng Su; Jin-Hui Zhong; Zhi-Cong Zeng; Mao-Hua Li; Bin Ren
Journal of Raman Spectroscopy | 2014
Pei Hu; Xiao-Shan Zheng; Cheng Zong; Mao-Hua Li; Liying Zhang; Wei Li; Bin Ren
Nanoscale | 2015
Li-Kun Yang; Tengxiang Huang; Zhi-Cong Zeng; Mao-Hua Li; Xiang Wang; Fang-Zu Yang; Bin Ren
Journal of Raman Spectroscopy | 2016
Mao-Hua Li; Ruiqi Lv; Sheng-Chao Huang; Yinzhen Dai; Zhi-Cong Zeng; Lei Wang; Bin Ren
2014 Electrochemical Conference on Energy & the Environment (ECEE - March 13-16, 2014) | 2014
Zhi-Cong Zeng; Sheng-Chao Huang; Mao-Hua Li; Tengxiang Huang; Bin Ren