1. Technical Field
The invention is directed to methods, counter-current diffuser units and other reactor configurations, lignocellulose pretreatment, and/or biorefineries suitable for use in biofuel production.
2. Background
Biofuels can be derived from a variety of feedstocks, including lignocellulosic biomass. Lignocellulosic biomass refers to plant biomass that is composed of cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin. Lignocellulose pretreatment systems are used to increase the susceptibility of the lignocellulose to subsequent hydrolysis and extraction steps. Such pretreatment systems may involve pulverizing, shredding, milling, heating, sonicating, irradiating, pressurizing, hydrolyzing, and/or chemically treating the lignocellulose.
For example, existing unit operations for acid hydrolysis of lignocellulose utilize dilute mineral acid (1-3% wt/wt) as catalyst and steam (150-200° C. saturated) as heat-transfer medium in order to effect hydrolysis of hemicellulose and/or cellulosic lignocellulose fractions. Dilute acids are typically pre-mixed with solid lignocellulose, and the acid-laden slurry is then heated to the reaction temperature by direct steam injection. These components are typically co-fed into one end of a hydrolysis reactor, such as a screw conveyor.
Several issues are common among typical co-current reactor configurations. For instance, high-pressure solid screws are needed to overcome the inlet pressure barrier from inlet-injected steam. Additionally, the favoring of monomer degradation to aldehydes is troublesome as the reaction proceeds and monomers are formed late in the reactor. Also, there is the drawback of increased steam consumption due to the co-fed design.
In the sugar industry, diffuser technology is finding wider acceptance in the extraction of sucrose from shredded sugar cane. A diffuser is essentially a counter-flow aqueous extraction system, with shredded sugar cane fed in one end and liquid hot water fed in the other end. Liquid is continually withdrawn from stage n+1 for application to the n stage, while at the same time sugar cane moves from stage n to stage n+1. Meanwhile, the combined water and sugar cane are compressed and macerated within the diffuser. Aqueous sucrose is removed through one output while residual sugar cane bagasse is simultaneously removed through another output. The more the sugar cane is broken down, the greater the extraction yield. Consequently, an increase in the breakdown of biomass would result in an increase of feedstock for producing biofuels and, hence, a greater yield of biofuel production.
In summary, conventional diffuser technology is limited to counter-current, aqueous extraction of soluble sugars from shredded sugar cane in the sugar industry. Moreover, conventional pretreatment technology is limited to co-current hydrolysis of insoluble polysaccharides. There is thus a need and desire for improved methods and systems for the pretreatment of lignocellulosic biomass.
The invention is directed to methods, counter-current diffuser units and other reactor configurations, lignocellulose pretreatment, and/or biorefineries suitable for use in biofuel or other renewable material production.
According to some embodiments, the invention is directed to a method of pre-treating biomass. The method includes contacting a biomass stream countercurrently with a pretreatment solution stream, and producing both a hydrolyzate stream and a pretreated biomass stream.
According to some embodiments, the biomass stream includes a lignocellulosic material. According to some embodiments, the lignocellulosic material may comprise cellulose, hemicellulose, lignin, or any combination of these materials.
According to some embodiments, the pretreatment solution stream may include an acid or a base. For example, the acid may include an inorganic acid, an organic acid, an amino acid, a mineral acid, a Bronsted acid, a Lewis acid, or any combination of these acids. More particularly, the acid may be sulfuric acid, sulfonic acid, phosphoric acid, nitric acid, acetic acid, lactic acid, formic acid, oxalic acid, succinic acid, levulinic acid, carbonic acid, glycolic acid, uronic acid, glucaric acid, hydrofluoric acid, boric acid, boron trifluoride, or any combination of these acids. As a further example, the base may include an inorganic base, an organic base, a mineral base, a Bronsted base, a Lewis base, or any combination of these bases. More particularly, the base may be ammonia, ammonium hydroxide, sodium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide, calcium hydroxide, carbonates, amines, urea, or any combination of these bases.
According to some embodiments, the hydrolyzate stream may contain greater than about 30% by weight of the original biomass.
According to some embodiments, the pretreated biomass stream may have an enzymatic digestibility of cellulose greater than about 70%.
According to some embodiments, the countercurrent contacting may occur in multiple interaction zones.
According to some embodiments, the pretreatment solution may have a concentration between about 0.01% and about 10% on a mass basis.
According to some embodiments, the method may further include heating the pretreatment solution to a temperature between about 100 and about 180° C.
According to some embodiments, the method includes carrying out the countercurrent contacting in a hydrolyzing diffuser unit, with the biomass having a residence time inside the diffuser unit between about 1 and about 60 minutes.
According to some embodiments, the method further includes converting the biomass to one or more sugars. For example, the sugars may include sucrose, glucose, fructose, mannose, galactose, xylose, arabinose, hexose, pentose, cellobiose, oligosaccharides, or any combination of these sugars.
According to some embodiments, the method may include converting the sugars into a renewable material or other product. For example, the product may include ethanol, ethylene, n-butanol, isobutanol, 2-butanol, butenes, isobutene, isoprenoids, triglycerides, lipids, fatty acids, lactic acid, acetic acid, propanediol, butanediol, formic acid, levulinic acid, furfural, 5-hydroxymethyl furfural, acetone-butanol-ethanol, acetone, amino acids, or any combination of these materials.
According to some embodiments, the invention is directed to a hydrolyzing diffuser unit. The unit may include a series of stages ranging from stage n to stage n+z, wherein stage n includes an inlet for biomass and stage n+z includes an inlet for a pretreatment solution. The unit may also include a system that continually moves biomass from stage n to stage n+1, a system that continually moves biomass from stage n+z to stage n+z−1, a system that continually withdraws the pretreatment solution from stage n+y, thereby producing a hydrolyzate stream, and a system that continually withdraws pretreated biomass from stage n+m, thereby producing a pretreated biomass stream.
According to some embodiments, with respect to the hydrolyzing diffuser unit, n≧1, n≦z≦n+20, 0≦y≦z−1, and m≦z.
According to some embodiments, the system moves the biomass at a rate that provides the biomass with a residence time inside the diffuser unit between about 1 and about 60 minutes.
According to some embodiments, the hydrolyzing diffuser unit also includes a device for controlling pressure within each stage.
According to some embodiments, the diffuser unit may be adapted for use with an alkaline or acidic pretreatment solution.
According to some embodiments, the invention is directed to reactor configurations that allow for modified flow of lignocellulose, acid, and/or steam, or other heat-transferring medium. More particularly, these reactor configurations allow for decreasing temperature, increasing acid concentration, and/or counter-current flow as the lignocellulose material moves from the reaction inlet to the outlet.
According to some embodiments, the invention is directed to a biorefinery for producing biofuels. The biorefinery may include a hydrolyzer diffuser unit, a saccharification unit for converting the biomass to a sugar; and a conversion unit for producing a renewable material from the sugar.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification, illustrate embodiments of the invention and, together with the description, serve to explain the features, advantages, and principles of the invention. In the drawings:
The invention is directed to methods, counter-current diffuser units and other reactor configurations, lignocellulose pretreatment, and/or biorefineries suitable for use in biofuel production. According to some embodiments, the intended application of diffuser technology used in the sugar industry is altered for use in biofuel production. According to some embodiments, chemistry of the liquid hot water stream used in diffuser technology is altered for improved breakdown of biomass. According to some embodiments, both the intended application of diffuser technology and chemistry of the liquid hot water stream used in diffuser technology are altered for improved breakdown of biomass.
According to some embodiments, diffuser technology used in the sugar industry can be altered for use in biofuel production with lignocellulosic biomass as the feed. With this approach, the diffuser effects lignocellulosic pretreatment, which makes the biomass amenable to further enzymatic hydrolysis to monomer sugars. By feeding sugar cane bagasse or other lignocellulosic biomass rather than shredded sugar cane into a diffuser, the diffuser can disrupt the heteropolymer matrix that makes up lignocellulose, making the lignocellulosic biomass more amenable to enzyme hydrolysis for monomer sugar recovery.
More particularly, according to some embodiments, biomass pretreatment for the production of biofuels can be carried out by contacting a biomass stream countercurrently with a pretreatment solution stream, and producing a hydrolyzate stream and a pretreated biomass stream. A hydrolyzing diffuser unit, described in detail below, can be used to carry out this process. The biomass stream may include a lignocellulosic material, which may include, for example, cellulose, hemicellulose, lignin, or combinations of any of these materials.
According to some embodiments, the pretreatment solution stream may be a stream of hot water, as used in conventional diffuser technology used in the sugar industry. However, as mentioned above, the chemistry of the liquid hot water stream used in diffuser technology may be altered for improved breakdown of biomass. More particularly, according to some embodiments, the water stream may be alkaline or acidic, which results in improved pretreatment of lignocellulosic biomass. For example, the pretreatment solution may have a concentration between about 0.01% and about 10%, or between about 0.01% and about 5%, on a mass basis.
According to some embodiments, the pretreatment solution stream may include an acid such as an inorganic acid, an organic acid, an amino acid, a mineral acid, a Bronsted acid, a Lewis acid, or a combination of any of these acids. More particularly, in certain embodiments, the acid may be sulfuric acid, sulfonic acid, phosphoric acid, nitric acid, acetic acid, lactic acid, formic acid, oxalic acid, succinic acid, levulinic acid, carbonic acid, glycolic acid, uronic acid, glucaric acid, hydrofluoric acid, boric acid, boron trifluoride, or a combination of any of these acids.
According to some embodiments, the pretreatment solution stream may include a base such as an inorganic base, an organic base, a mineral base, a Bronsted base, a Lewis base, or a combination of any of these bases. More particularly, in certain embodiments, the base may be ammonia, ammonium hydroxide, sodium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide, calcium hydroxide, carbonates, amines, urea, or a combination of any of these bases.
According to some embodiments, the biomass pretreatment, more particularly the countercurrent contact of the biomass with the pretreatment solution stream, may be carried out in a hydrolyzing diffuser unit, such as the hydrolyzing diffuser unit 10 illustrated in
Other embodiments, apart from the hydrolyzing diffuser unit 10 illustrated in
In some embodiments, the hydrolyzing diffuser unit, or countercurrent section, includes a series of stages ranging from a first stage to a final stage, with one or more intermediate stages therebetween. The first stage includes an inlet for biomass and the final stage includes an inlet for a pretreatment solution. The unit also includes a system that continually withdraws the pretreatment solution from an intermediate stage and feeds the pretreatment solution into the first stage thereby producing a hydrolyzate stream, while simultaneously moving biomass from the first stage to an intermediate stage thereby producing a pretreated biomass stream.
According to some embodiments, the biomass may have a residence time inside the hydrolyzing diffuser unit 10 between about less than 1 and about 90 minutes, measured from the time the biomass enters the inlet 14 until the pretreated biomass stream 22 produced from the same biomass exits stage n+y. Residence time of the biomass within the hydrolyzing diffuser unit 10 is dependent upon the rate at which the system 18 moves biomass from stage n to stage n+1.
According to some embodiments, the pretreatment solution may have a residence time inside the hydrolyzing diffuser unit 10 between about less than 1 and about 120 minutes, measured from the time the pretreatment solution enters the inlet 16 until the hydrolyzate stream 24 exits stage n+y. Residence time of the pretreatment solution within the hydrolyzing diffuser unit 10 is dependent upon the rate at which the system 20 moves pretreatment solution from stage n+z to stage n+z−1. In some embodiments, the biomass residence time is the same as the pretreatment solution residence time. In other embodiments, the pretreatment solution residence time is greater than the biomass residence time, and in other embodiments the pretreatment solution residence time is less than the biomass residence time.
The pretreatment solution may be heated to a temperature between about 100 and about 180° C. within the hydrolyzing diffuser unit 10 to assist in breaking down the biomass. Heat can be supplied by steam, saturated steam, super heated steam, hot water, glycol, heat transfer oil, heat transfer fluid, other process streams, and/or the like. Temperature control can use any suitable technique and/or configuration, such as indirect heat exchange, direct heat exchange, convection, conduction, radiation, and/or the like.
Additionally or alternatively, the hydrolyzing diffuser unit 10 may include a device for controlling pressure within each of the stages 12. For example, when using dilute aqueous ammonia as the pretreatment solution, as the dilute aqueous ammonia moves from stage n+1 to stage n, the pressure within each stage 12 can be used to control the amount of aqueous-phase ammonia, and thereby allow for tuning of the pretreatment severity and efficacy.
As used herein, the terms “stage” and “zone” can be used interchangeably to refer to a single step or area in a process, which can be separated by other steps or areas by time and/or distance.
The hydrolyzing diffuser unit 10 may be adapted for use with an alkaline or acidic pretreatment solution. For example, the hydrolyzing diffuser unit 10 may be formed primarily of a high-alloy material, such as Hastelloy®, which is commercially available from Haynes International, Inc. of Kokomo, Ind.; Incoloy®, which is commercially available from Huntington Alloys Corporation of Huntington, W. Va.; alloy AL-6XN® (N08367), which is commercially available from Allegheny Ludlum Corporation of Pittsburgh, Pa.; MC Alloy, which is commercially available from MMC Superalloy of Saitama, Japan; Alloy 926 (N08926), which is commercially available from M. Woite GmbH of Erkrath, Germany; Alloy G (N06007), Alloy 20Cb-3® (N08020), Alloy 255 (S39255), 7Mo-PLUS (S32950), Alloy 59 (N06059), and Nickel 200 (N02200), each of which is commercially available from a variety of vendors; titanium-stabilized alloys, zirconium-stabilized alloys, silicon-stabilized alloys, chromium-stabilized alloys, nickel-stabilized alloys, molybdenum-stabilized alloys, copper-stabilized alloys, and combinations of any of these materials.
According to some embodiments, during or following pretreatment in the hydrolyzing diffuser unit 10, the biomass may be converted to one or more sugars, such as sucrose, glucose, fructose, mannose, galactose, xylose, arabinose, hexose, pentose, cellobiose, oligosaccharides, or combinations of any of these sugars. In certain embodiments, the sugar or sugars may subsequently be converted into a renewable material or other product. The product may include, for example, methane, methanol, ethanol, ethylene, n-butanol, isobutanol, 2-butanol, butenes, isobutene, isoprenoids, triglycerides, lipids, fatty acids, lactic acid, acetic acid, propanediol, butanediol, formic acid, levulinic acid, furfural, 5-hydroxymethyl furfural, acetone, amino acids, or any combination of these materials.
Other pretreatment reactor configurations that allow for modified flow of lignocellulose, acid, and/or steam, or other heat-transferring medium, are also contemplated herein. These reactor configurations allow for decreasing temperature, increasing acid concentration, and/or counter-current flow as the lignocellulose material moves from the reaction inlet to the outlet.
In certain embodiments, steam condensation provides the majority of heat transfer to the solid lignocellulose. As the steam and lignocellulose mix, steam condenses and the lignocellulose/acid slurry rises in temperature along the length of the reactor. This condensing steam effectively dilutes the mineral-acid catalyst as the reacting slurry progresses along the length of the reactor. The graph in
However, available data on the kinetics of hemicellulose hydrolysis to monomer sugars (k1) and subsequent degradation of sugars to aldehydes (kD) suggests that increasing reactor temperature and decreasing acid concentration along the length of the reactor favors the formation of aldehydic degradation products.
According to some embodiments, a twin-channel screw conveyor 30 may be used for continuous counter-current steam addition. An example of a twin-channel screw conveyor 30 is illustrated in
Additional permutations to the design illustrated in
According to some embodiments, two-stage pretreatment may be carried out using a steam/acid addition stage followed by a cooling/acid addition stage. An example of a two-stage pretreatment system is illustrated in
Additional permutations to the design illustrated in
According to some embodiments, gravity-settling of lignocellulose may be used with up-flow of pre-heated acid catalyst. An example of such a reactor 70 is illustrated in
In still other embodiments, the solid lignocellulose is fed at the inlet 74 at or near the bottom of a counter-current reactor 70, while pretreatment solution is injected into an inlet 72 near the top of the reactor. Thus, the reactor 70 illustrated in
In embodiments wherein the biomass is moving upward and the liquid is moving downward, excess pressure, such as in the form of steam or compressed gas (for example, CO2, N2, or the like) can be used to force the liquid through the biomass thus decreasing the retention time of the liquid relative to the feedstock and increasing the permeability of the feedstock to the liquid.
According to some embodiments, a system 90 of mixing tanks 92 and settling tanks 94 may be used for counter-flowing solid-liquid separations. An example of such a system 90 is illustrated in
In this configuration, lignocellulose and acid flow counter-currently into a series of mixing tanks 92 and settling tanks 94. Lignocellulose is introduced into a first mixing tank (mixing tank 1) through a first inlet 96 while acid is fed into a last mixing tank (mixing tank 3, in
In certain embodiments, applied to essentially any of the reactor configurations described herein, a water-permeable membrane may be used between the various tanks, units, or zones for aiding in reconcentration of acid streams. Alternatively, reconcentration of acid streams may be accomplished with distillation.
In certain reactor embodiments, particularly the gravity-settling reactor 70 illustrated in
According to some embodiments, the pretreatment stream 118 may be connected to a liquid-solid separation unit 120 to generate a pretreated biomass stream 122 and a hydrolyzate stream 124. For example, units for liquid-solid separation could comprise a filter, a membrane, a settling tank, or a screw-press.
The pretreated biomass stream 122 may additionally be connected to a saccharification unit 126 wherein the pretreated lignocellulosic material is converted to a sugar, which leaves the saccharification unit 126 in the form of a renewable-based feedstock stream 128. The renewable-based feedstock stream 128 connects to a conversion unit 130 to form a renewable material 136 or other product from the sugar. The renewable material 136 or other product may include ethanol, ethylene, n-butanol, isobutanol, 2-butanol, butenes, isobutene, isoprenoids, triglycerides, lipids, fatty acids, lactic acid, acetic acid, propanediol, butanediol, formic acid, levulinic acid, furfural, 5-hydroxymethyl furfural, acetone-butanol-ethanol, acetone, amino acids, or any combination of these materials, for example.
The hydrolyzate stream 124 may be connected to the conversion unit 130. Alternatively, the hydrolyzate stream 124 may be connected to a conditioning unit 132 before feeding into the conversion unit 130 or an independent conversion unit 134 to produce renewable product 138, such as hydrocarbons, alcohols, poly-ols, sugar derivatives, organic acids, ketones, aldehydes, amines, or the like. Other configurations of the biorefinery 110 are within the scope of this invention.
Biorefinery broadly refers to a plant, an industrial complex, a collection of process units, and/or the like, such as used to produce a renewable material or other product.
Renewable material broadly refers to a substance and/or an item that has been at least partially derived from a source and/or a process capable of being replaced at least in part by natural ecological cycles and/or resources. Renewable materials may broadly include chemicals, chemical intermediates, solvents, monomers, oligomers, polymers, biofuels, biofuel intermediates, biogasoline, biogasoline blendstocks, biodiesel, green diesel, renewable diesel, biodiesel blend stocks, biodistillates, biochar, biocoke, renewable building materials, and/or the like. Desirably, but not necessarily, the renewable material may be derived from a living organism, such as plants, algae, bacteria, fungi, and/or the like.
Biofuel broadly refers to components and/or streams suitable for use as a fuel and/or a combustion source derived at least in part from renewable sources. The biofuel can be sustainably produced and/or have reduced and/or no net carbon emissions to the atmosphere, such as when compared to fossil fuels. According to some embodiments, renewable sources can exclude materials mined or drilled, such as from the underground. In some embodiments, renewable resources can include single cell organisms, multi-cell organisms, plants, fungi, bacteria, algae, cultivated crops, non-cultivated crops, timber, and/or the like. Biofuels can be suitable for use as transportation fuels, such as for use in land vehicles, marine vehicles, aviation vehicles, and/or the like. Biofuels can be suitable for use in power generation, such as raising steam, exchanging energy with a suitable heat transfer media, generating syngas, generating hydrogen, making electricity, and/or the like.
Biogasoline broadly refers to components and/or streams suitable for direct use and/or blending into a gasoline pool and/or octane supply derived from renewable sources, such as methane, hydrogen, syn (synthesis) gas, methanol, ethanol, propanol, butanol, dimethyl ether, methyl tert-butyl ether, ethyl tert-butyl ether, hexanol, aliphatic or olefinic compounds (straight, branched, and/or cyclic), heptane, isooctane, cyclopentane, aromatic compounds, ethyl benzene, and/or the like. Butanol broadly refers to products and derivatives of 1-butanol, 2-butanol, iso-butanol, other isomers, and/or the like. Biogasoline may be used in spark ignition engines, such as automobile gasoline internal combustion engines. According to one embodiment, the biogasoline and/or biogasoline blends meet or comply with industrially accepted fuel standards.
Biodiesel broadly refers to components and/or streams suitable for direct use and/or blending into a diesel pool and/or a cetane supply derived from renewable sources. Suitable biodiesel molecules can include fatty acid esters, monoglycerides, diglycerides, triglycerides, lipids, fatty alcohols, alkanes, naphthas, distillate range materials, paraffinic materials, aromatic materials, aliphatic compounds (straight, branched, and/or cyclic), and/or the like. Biodiesel can be used in compression ignition engines, such as automotive diesel internal combustion engines, truck heavy duty diesel engines, and/or the like. In the alternative, the biodiesel can also be used in gas turbines, heaters, boilers, and/or the like. According to some embodiments, the biodiesel and/or biodiesel blends meet or comply with industrially accepted fuel standards, such as B20, B40, B60, B80, B99.9, B100, and/or the like.
Biodistillate broadly refers to components and/or streams suitable for direct use and/or blending into aviation fuels (jet), lubricant base stocks, kerosene fuels, fuel oils, and/or the like. Biodistillates can be derived from renewable sources, and have any suitable boiling point range, such as a boiling point range of about 100° C. to about 700° C., about 150° C. to about 350° C., and/or the like.
Biomass broadly refers to biological material from living or recently living organisms, such as plant or animal matter.
Hydrolyzate broadly refers to a substance produced by hydrolysis.
Counter-current system broadly refers to a system in which two or more streams of material flow past one another in different directions. In contrast, a co-current system includes two or more streams of material that flow in the same direction.
Lignocellulosic broadly refers to containing cellulose, hemicellulose, lignin, and/or the like, such as may be derived from plant material and/or the like. Lignocellulosic material may include any suitable material, such as sugar cane, sugar cane bagasse, energy cane bagasse, rice, rice straw, corn, corn stover, wheat, wheat straw, maize, maize stover, sorghum, sorghum stover, sweet sorghum, sweet sorghum stover, cotton remnant, sugar beet, sugar beet pulp, soybean, rapeseed, jatropha, switchgrass, miscanthus, other grasses, timber, softwood, hardwood, wood waste, sawdust, paper, paper waste, agricultural waste, municipal waste, any other suitable biomass material, and/or the like.
Lignin broadly refers to a biopolymer that may be part of secondary cell walls in plants, such as a complex highly cross-linked aromatic polymer that may covalently link to hemicellulose.
Hemicellulose broadly refers to a branched sugar polymer composed mostly of pentoses, such as with a generally random amorphous structure and typically may include up to hundreds of thousands of pentose units.
Cellulose broadly refers to an organic compound with the formula (C6H10O5)z where z includes any suitable integer. Cellulose may include a polysaccharide with a linear chain of several hundred to over ten thousand hexose units and a high degree of crystalline structure, for example.
The scope of the invention is not limited merely to breakdown of biomass, but broadly may be applied to and/or used with other processes and/or applications.
As used herein the terms “having”, “comprising”, and “including” are open and inclusive expressions. Alternatively, the term “consisting” is a closed and exclusive expression. Should any ambiguity exist in construing any term in the claims or the specification, the intent of the drafter is toward open and inclusive expressions.
Regarding an order, number, sequence, and/or limit of repetition for steps in a method or process, the drafter intends no implied order, number, sequence, and/or limit of repetition for the steps to the scope of the invention, unless explicitly provided.
Regarding ranges, ranges are to be construed as including all points between upper and lower values, such as to provide support for all possible ranges contained between the upper and the lower values including ranges with no upper bound and/or lower bound.
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations can be made in the disclosed structures and methods without departing from the scope or spirit of the invention. Particularly, descriptions of any one embodiment can be freely combined with descriptions or other embodiments to result in combinations and/or variations of two or more elements or limitations. Other embodiments of the invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art from consideration of the specification and practice of the invention disclosed herein. It is intended that the specification and examples be considered exemplary only, with a true scope and spirit of the invention being indicated by the following claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/US2012/067827 | 12/5/2012 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61567449 | Dec 2011 | US |