Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Ming-De Li is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Ming-De Li.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2012

The degradation mechanism of methyl orange under photo-catalysis of TiO2

Lihong Yu; Jingyu Xi; Ming-De Li; Hung Tat Chan; Tao Su; David Lee Phillips; Wai Kin Chan

The properties of photo-generated reactive species, holes and electrons in bulk TiO(2) (anatase) film and nano-sized TiO(2) were studied and their effects towards decomposing pollutant dye methyl orange (MO) were compared by transient absorption spectroscopies. The recombination of holes and electrons in nano-sized TiO(2) was found to be on the microsecond time scale consistent with previous reports in the literature. However, in bulk TiO(2) film, the holes and electrons were found to be on the order of picoseconds due to ultra fast free electrons. The time-correlated single-photon counting (TCSPC) technique combined with confocal fluorescence microscopy revealed that the fluorescence intensity of MO is at first enhanced noticeably by TiO(2) under UV excitation and soon afterwards weakened dramatically, with the lifetime prolonged. Photo-generated holes in nano-sized TiO(2) can directly oxidize MO on the time scale of nanoseconds, while free electrons photo-generated in bulk TiO(2) film can directly inject into MO on the order of picoseconds. Through cyclic voltammetry measurements, it was found that MO can be reduced at -0.28 V and oxidized at 1.4 V (vs. SCE) and this provides thermodynamic evidence for MO to be degraded by electrons and holes in TiO(2). Through comparison of the hole-scavenging effect of MO and water, it was found that in polluted water when MO is above 1.6 × 10(-4) M, the degradation is mainly due to a direct hole oxidation process, while below 1.6 × 10(-4) M, hydroxyl oxidation competes strongly and might exceed the hole oxidation.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2012

Direct observation of triplet state mediated decarboxylation of the neutral and anion forms of ketoprofen in water-rich, acidic, and PBS solutions.

Ming-De Li; Jiani Ma; Tao Su; Mingyue Liu; Lihong Yu; David Phillips

The decarboxylation reaction of KP in different acetonitrile-water mixtures producing a carbanion or biradical intermediate is investigated by using femtosecond transient absorption and nanosecond time-resolved resonance Raman spectroscopies to unveil the mechanism of the photochemistry of KP. The irradiation of either the neutral or anion forms of KP leads to the excited singlet state KP species transforming into a corresponding triplet state KP species via a highly efficient intersystem crossing, and then, a triplet state mediated decarboxylation reaction occurs to generate a carbanion intermediate in the phosphate buffer solutions or a biradical species in the water-rich or acidic solutions examined here.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2011

Water‐ and Acid‐Mediated Excited‐State Intramolecular Proton Transfer and Decarboxylation Reactions of Ketoprofen in Water‐Rich and Acidic Aqueous Solutions

Ming-De Li; Chi Shun Yeung; Xiangguo Guan; Jiani Ma; Wen Li; Chensheng Ma; David Lee Phillips

We present an investigation of the decarboxylation reaction of ketoprofen (KP) induced by triplet excited-state intramolecular proton transfer in water-rich and acidic solutions. Nanosecond time-resolved resonance Raman spectroscopy results show that the decarboxylation reaction is facile in aqueous solutions with high water ratios (water/acetonitrile ≥50%) or acidic solutions with moderate and strong acid concentration. These experimental results are consistent with results from density functional theory calculations in which 1) the activation energy barriers for the triplet-state intramolecular proton transfer and associated decarboxylation process become lower when more water molecules (from one up to four molecules) are involved in the reaction system and 2) perchloric acid, sulfuric acid, and hydrochloric acid can shuttle a proton from the carboxyl to carbonyl group through an initial intramolecular proton transfer of the triplet excited state, which facilitates the cleavage of the C-C bond, thus leading to the decarboxylation reaction of triplet state KP. During the decarboxylation process, the water molecules and acid molecules may act as bridges to mediate intramolecular proton transfer for the triplet state KP when KP is irradiated by ultraviolet light in water-rich or acidic aqueous solutions and subsequently it generates a triplet-protonated carbanion biradical species. The faster generation of triplet-protonated carbanion biradical in acidic solutions than in water-rich solutions with a high water ratio is also supported by the lower activation energy barrier calculated for the acid-mediated reactions versus those of water-molecule-assisted reactions.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2012

Unraveling the Mechanism of the Photodeprotection Reaction of 8-Bromo- and 8-Chloro-7-hydroxyquinoline Caged Acetates

Jiani Ma; Adam C. Rea; Hui-Ying An; Chensheng Ma; Xiangguo Guan; Ming-De Li; Tao Su; Chi Shun Yeung; Kyle T. Harris; Yue Zhu; Nganga Jl; Olesya D. Fedoryak; Timothy M. Dore; David Lee Phillips

Abstract Photoremovable protecting groups (PPGs) when conjugated to biological effectors forming “caged compounds” are a powerful means to regulate the action of physiologically active messengers in vivo through 1-photon excitation (1PE) and 2-photon excitation (2PE). Understanding the photodeprotection mechanism is important for their physiological use. We compared the quantum efficiencies and product outcomes in different solvent and pH conditions for the photolysis reactions of (8-chloro-7-hydroxyquinolin-2-yl)methyl acetate (CHQ-OAc) and (8-bromo-7-hydroxyquinolin-2-yl)methyl acetate (BHQ-OAc), representatives of the quinoline class of phototriggers for biological use, and conducted nanosecond time-resolved spectroscopic studies using transient emission (ns-EM), transient absorption (ns-TA), transient resonance Raman (ns-TR2), and time-resolved resonance Raman (ns-TR3) spectroscopies. The results indicate differences in the photochemical mechanisms and product outcomes, and reveal that the triplet excited state is most likely on the pathway to the product and that dehalogenation competes with release of acetate from BHQ-OAc, but not CHQ-OAc. A high fluorescence quantum yield and a more efficient excited-state proton transfer (ESPT) in CHQ-OAc compared to BHQ-OAc explain the lower quantum efficiency of CHQ-OAc relative to BHQ-OAc.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2011

Resonance Raman spectroscopic and theoretical investigation of the excited state proton transfer reaction dynamics of 2-thiopyridone.

Rui Du; Chong Liu; Yanying Zhao; Ke-Mei Pei; Huigang Wang; Xuming Zheng; Ming-De Li; Jiadan Xue; David Phillips

The resonance Raman spectra were obtained for both 2-thiopyridone (2TP) and its proton-transfer tautomer 2-mercaptopyridine (2MP) in water solution. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations were carried out to help elucidate their ultraviolet electronic transitions and vibrational assignments of the resonance Raman spectra associated with their B-band absorptions. The nanosecond time-resolved resonance Raman spectroscopic experiment was carried out to further confirm the assignment that the transient species was the ground state 2MP. The different short-time structural dynamics were examined for both 2TP and 2MP in terms of their resonance Raman intensity patterns. The transition barriers between 2TP and 2MP for S(0), T(1), and S(1) states are determined by using (U)B3LYP-TD and CASSCF level of theory computations, respectively. The excited state proton transfer (ESPT) reaction mechanism is proposed and briefly discussed.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2012

Effects of hydrogen bond and solvent polarity on the C=O stretching of bis(2-thienyl)ketone in solution.

Huigang Wang; Libo Wang; Shaosong Shen; Wenfei Zhang; Ming-De Li; Lili Du; Xuming Zheng; David Phillips

The optimized structural parameters, the absorption and the resonance Raman spectra have been investigated for the bis(2-thienyl)ketone in gas phase, in cyclohexane, methanol, and acetonitrile solvents by means of time dependent density functional theory calculations, the solvent electronic polarization effect on the solvation shift is examined and in well accordance with the calculation. The effect of increasing the polarity of the solvent is well represented by the polarizable continuum model, both for the absorption spectra and resonance Raman intensities. The Raman spectra of the C=O stretching mode, which is sensitive to the intermolecular interaction for bis(2-thienyl)ketone dissolved in solvents, were systematically studied. It was found that the hydrogen bond effect plays an important role in reducing the carbonyl stretching wavenumbers. The results of Raman shifts were interpreted through the dilution effect, solvation effects, and hydrogen bond-forming effects. Furthermore, the excitation profiles of several important Raman bands of bis(2-thienyl)ketone molecule in different solvents have been critically analyzed. The solvent effects on structural and symmetry properties of the molecule in S2 electronic state as well as the short-time photo relaxation dynamics have been discussed.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Direct spectroscopic observation of closed-shell singlet, open-shell singlet, and triplet p-biphenylyloxenium ion.

Ming-De Li; Patrick J. Hanway; Toshia R. Albright; Arthur H. Winter; David Lee Phillips

The photophysics and photochemistry of p-biphenylyl hydroxylamine hydrochloride was studied using laser flash photolysis ranging from the femtosecond to the microsecond time scale. The singlet excited state of this photoprecursor is formed within 350 fs and partitions into three different transients that are assigned to the p-biphenyloxy radical, the open-shell singlet p-biphenylyloxenium ion, and the triplet p-biphenylyloxenium ion, having lifetimes of 40 μs, 45 ps, and 1.6 ns, respectively, in CH3CN. The open-shell singlet p-biphenylyloxenium ion predominantly undergoes internal conversion to produce the closed-shell singlet p-biphenylyloxenium ion, which has a lifetime of 5-20 ns. The longer-lived radical is unambiguously assigned by nanosecond time-resolved resonance Raman (ns-TR(3)) spectroscopy, and the assignment of the short-lived singlet and triplet oxenium ion transient absorptions are supported by matching time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT) predictions of the absorptions of these species, as well as by product studies that implicate the intermediacy of charged electrophilic intermediates. Product studies from photolysis give p-biphenylol as the major product and a chloride adduct as the major product when NaCl is added as a trap. Thermolysis studies give p-biphenylol as a major product, as well as water, ammonium, and chloro adducts. These studies provide a rare direct look at a discrete oxenium ion intermediate and the first detection of open-shell singlet and triplet configurations of an oxenium ion, as well as providing an intriguing example of the importance of excited state dynamics in governing the electronic state population of reactive intermediates.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2011

Reaction mechanisms and structural characterization of the reactive intermediates observed after the photolysis of 3-(hydroxymethyl)benzophenone in acetonitrile, 2-propanol, and neutral and acidic aqueous solutions.

Jiani Ma; Ming-De Li; David Phillips; Peter Wan

Nanosecond time-resolved resonance Raman (ns-TR(3)) spectroscopy was employed to investigate the photoinduced reactions of 3-(hydroxymethyl)benzophenone (1) in acetonitrile, 2-propanol, and neutral and acidic aqueous solutions. Density functional theory calculations were utilized to help the interpretation of the experimental spectra. In acetonitrile, the neutral triplet state 1 [denoted here as (m-BPOH)(3)] was observed on the nanosecond to microsecond time scale. In 2-propanol this triplet state appeared to abstract a hydrogen atom from the solvent molecules to produce the aryphenyl ketyl radical of 1 (denoted here as ArPK of 1), and then this species underwent a cross-coupling reaction with the dimethylketyl radical (also formed from the hydrogen abstraction reaction) to form a long-lived light absorbing transient species that was tentatively identified to be mainly 2-(4-(hydroxy(3-(hydroxymethyl)phenyl)methylene)cyclohexa-2,5-dienyl)propan-2-ol. In 1:1 H(2)O:CH(3)CN aqueous solution at neutral pH, (m-BPOH)(3) reacted with water to produce the ArPK of 1 and then underwent further reaction to produce a long-lived light absorbing transient species. Three photochemical reactions appeared to take place after 266 nm photolysis of 1 in acidic aqueous solutions, a photoreduction reaction, an overall photohydration reaction, and a novel photoredox reaction. TR(3) experiments in 1:1 H(2)O:CH(3)CN aqueous solution at pH 2 detected a new triplet biradical species, which is associated with an unusual photoredox reaction. This reaction is observed to be the predominant reaction at pH 2 and seems to face competition from the overall photohydration reaction at pH 0.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Direct Spectroscopic Detection and EPR Investigation of a Ground State Triplet Phenyl Oxenium Ion.

Ming-De Li; Toshia R. Albright; Patrick J. Hanway; Mingyue Liu; Xin Lan; Song-Bo Li; Julie A. Peterson; Arthur H. Winter; David Lee Phillips

Oxenium ions are important reactive intermediates in synthetic chemistry and enzymology, but little is known of the reactivity, lifetimes, spectroscopic signatures, and electronic configurations of these unstable species. Recent advances have allowed these short-lived ions to be directly detected in solution from laser flash photolysis of suitable photochemical precursors, but all of the studies to date have focused on aryloxenium ions having closed-shell singlet ground state configurations. To study alternative spin configurations, we synthesized a photoprecursor to the m-dimethylamino phenyloxenium ion, which is predicted by both density functional theory and MRMP2 computations to have a triplet ground state electronic configuration. A combination of femtosecond and nanosecond transient absorption spectroscopy, nanosecond time-resolved Resonance Raman spectroscopy (ns-TR(3)), cryogenic matrix EPR spectroscopy, computational analysis, and photoproduct studies allowed us to trace essentially the complete arc of the photophysics and photochemistry of this photoprecursor and permitted a first look at a triplet oxenium ion. Ultraviolet photoexcitation of this precursor populates higher singlet excited states, which after internal conversion to S1 over 800 fs are followed by bond heterolysis in ∼1 ps, generating a hot closed-shell singlet oxenium ion that undergoes vibrational cooling in ∼50 ps followed by intersystem crossing in ∼300 ps to generate the triplet ground state oxenium ion. In contrast to the rapid trapping of singlet phenyloxenium ions by nucleophiles seen in prior studies, the triplet oxenium ion reacts via sequential H atom abstractions on the microsecond time domain to ultimately yield the reduced m-dimethylaminophenol as the only detectable stable photoproduct. Band assignments were made by comparisons to computed spectra of candidate intermediates and comparisons to related known species. The triplet oxenium ion was also detected in the ns-TR(3) experiments, permitting a more clear assignment and identifying the triplet state as the π,π* triplet configuration. The triplet ground state of this ion was further supported by photolysis of the photoprecursor in an ethanol glass at ∼4 K and observing a triplet species by cryogenic EPR spectroscopy.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2015

Photoconversion of β-Lapachone to α-Lapachone via a Protonation-Assisted Singlet Excited State Pathway in Aqueous Solution: A Time-Resolved Spectroscopic Study

Lili Du; Ming-De Li; Yanfeng Zhang; Jiadan Xue; Xiting Zhang; Ruixue Zhu; Shun Cheung Cheng; Xuechen Li; David Phillips

The photophysical and photochemical reactions of β-lapachone were studied using femtosecond transient absorption, nanosecond transient absorption, and nanosecond time-resolved resonance Raman spectroscopy techniques and density functional theory calculations. In acetonitrile, β-lapachone underwent an efficient intersystem crossing to form the triplet state of β-lapachone. However, in water-rich solutions, the singlet state of β-lapachone was predominantly quenched by the photoinduced protonation of the carbonyl group at the β position (O9). After protonation, a series of fast reaction steps occurred to eventually generate the triplet state α-lapachone intermediate. This triplet state of α-lapachone then underwent intersystem crossing to produce the ground singlet state of α-lapachone as the final product. 1,2-Naphthoquinone is examined in acetonitrile and water solutions in order to elucidate the important roles that water and the pyran ring play during the photoconversion from β-lapachone to α-lapachone. β-Lapachone can also be converted to α-lapachone in the ground state when a strong acid is added to an aqueous solution. Our investigation indicates that β-lapachone can be converted to α-lapachone by photoconversion in aqueous solutions by a protonation-assisted singlet excited state reaction or by an acid-assisted ground state reaction.

Collaboration


Dive into the Ming-De Li's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mingyue Liu

University of Hong Kong

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ruixue Zhu

University of Hong Kong

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tao Su

University of Hong Kong

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lili Du

University of Hong Kong

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jiadan Xue

University of Hong Kong

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Xin Lan

University of Hong Kong

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge