Openly mentions LENR and Andrea Rossi...

METHOD AND SYSTEM FOR HIGH EFFICIENCY ELECTRICITY GENERATION USING LOW
ENERGY THERMAL HEAT GENERATION AND THERMIONIC DEVICES
Document Type and Number:
United States Patent Application 20170213611 Kind Code: A1

http://www.freepatentsonline.com/y2017/0213611.html

Abstract:
A system and method are provided for generating electric power from
relatively low temperature energy sources at efficiency levels not
previously available. The present system and method employ recent
advances in low energy nuclear reaction technology and
thermionic/thermotunneling device technology first to generate heat
and then to convert a substantial portion of the heat generated to
usable electrical power. Heat may be generated by a LENR system
employing nuclear reactions that occur in readily available materials
at ambient temperatures without a high energy input requirement and do
not produce radioactive byproducts. The heat generated by the LENR
system may be transferred through one or more thermionic converter
devices in heat transfer relationship with the LENR system to generate
electric power.




Inventors:
Cox, Rodney T. (North Plains, OR, US)
Walitzki, Hans (Portland, OR, US)
Application Number:
13/893318
Publication Date:
07/27/2017
Filing Date:
05/13/2013
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Assignee:
Borealis Technical Limited (London, GB)
International Classes:
G21D7/04; G21D1/00; G21G1/02; H01J45/00
Attorney, Agent or Firm:
BOREALIS TECHNICAL LIMITED (23545 NW SKYLINE BLVD NORTH PLAINS OR 971339204)
Claims:
1. A high efficiency electric power generating system comprising one
or more low energy nuclear reaction generating means for producing a
reliable source of heat and one or more thermionic converter means in
heat transfer relationship with said low energy nuclear reaction
generating means for receiving said reliable source of heat, wherein
said thermionic converter means is configured to efficiently generate
electric power from said reliable source of heat at an efficiency
within the range from about 10% of Carnot to about 80% of Carnot
efficiency.

2. The electric power generating system of claim 1, wherein said low
energy nuclear power reaction generating means is designed to use low
cost reactants to safely produce a heat generating reaction.

3. The electric power generating system of claim 1, wherein said
thermionic converter means comprises at least a pair of electrodes
separated by a gap, and each one of said pair of spaced electrodes has
an Avto metal surface configuration on a surface of said electrode
facing said gap.

4. The electric power generating system of claim 3, wherein said
thermionic converter means further comprises a first active area in
thermal contact between said low energy nuclear reaction generating
means and one of said electrodes and a second active area in thermal
and electrical contact between another of said electrodes and electric
power destination means.

5. The electric power generating system of claim 1, wherein said
source of heat comprises a heat transfer fluid selected from heat
transfer fluids comprising liquids and gasses.

6. The electric power generating system of claim 1, wherein said low
energy nuclear reaction generating means comprises barrier means
designed and positioned to contain any radioactivity produced when
said source of heat is produced.

7. The electric power generating system of claim 1, comprising a
plurality of low energy nuclear reaction generating means positioned
to be in heat transfer relationship with said one or more thermionic
converter means.

8. The electric power generating system of claim 1, wherein a
plurality of thermionic converter means is positioned to be in heat
transfer relationship with said one or more low energy nuclear
reaction generating means.

9. A high efficiency method for generating electric power from heat
comprising: a. providing at least one low energy nuclear reaction
generator and activating said low energy nuclear reaction generator to
produce a low energy nuclear reaction between reactants selected to
produce a supply of heat; b. providing at least one thermionic
converter in heat transfer relationship with said low energy nuclear
reaction generator, wherein said thermionic converter is designed to
convert heat energy from said supply of heat to electric energy at an
efficiency in the range from about 10% of Carnot to about 80% of
Carnot; c. directing said supply of heat from said low energy nuclear
reaction generator to said thermionic converter; d. transferring heat
from said supply of heat through said thermionic convert to cause heat
energy from said supply of heat to be converted to a supply of
electrical energy; and e. directing said supply of electrical energy
to an electric power destination.

10. The method of claim 9, wherein said thermionic converter converts
heat energy from said supply of heat to electric energy at an
efficiency in the range of about 50% of Carnot to about 80% of Carnot.

11. The method of claim 9, wherein said reactants are selected to
produce said supply of heat at ambient temperatures without
discharging radioactive byproducts.

12. The method of claim 9, wherein said thermionic converter comprises
a pair of spaced electrodes with facing surfaces having an Avto metal
configuration, whereby heat energy from said supply of heat enhances a
flow of electrons and current through said thermionic converter to
produce electric energy.

13. The method of claim 9, wherein said supply of heat is increased by
providing a plurality of low energy nuclear reaction generators in
heat transfer relationship with said thermionic converter.

14. The method of claim 9, wherein said supply of electrical energy is
increased by providing a plurality of thermionic converters in heat
transfer relationship with said low energy nuclear reaction generator.

15. The method of claim 9, wherein said supply of heat comprises a
heat transfer fluid in heat transfer contact between said low energy
nuclear reaction generator and said thermionic converter.

16. The method of claim 9, wherein, in step d, any heat energy not
converted to electrical energy is captured and used.

17. A system for efficiently converting heat energy into electrical
energy using the method of claim 9, wherein said system comprises a
low energy nuclear reaction generator designed to generate said supply
of heat from nonradioactive metals in heat transfer contact with
electrodes in said thermionic device configured and positioned to
efficiently transfer energy from a heat source-contacting portion of
said device to a heat sink-contacting portion of said device and to
generate electrical energy as heat is transferred through said
thermionic device.

18. The method of claim 9, wherein said supply of heat is produced by
low temperature energy sources in said low energy nuclear reaction
generator and directed to said thermionic converter to generate a
sustainable supply of electrical energy.

Description:
PRIORITY CLAIM
This application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Application No.
61/646,226, filed May 11, 2012, the disclosure of which is fully
incorporated herein.

TECHNICAL FIELD
The present invention relates generally to efficient energy production
and specifically to the very efficient production of electrical energy
possible with a system and method that employs low energy nuclear
reaction heat generation and thermionic devices for the conversion of
heat to electrical energy.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
As the fossil fuel supplies currently used for electric power
generation continue to be depleted, much effort has been directed
toward finding suitable replacements. Such suitable replacements
should efficiently produce the energy needed to meet the demands of a
power-hungry world population without the adverse environmental
effects of coal or other commonly used fossil fuels. While nuclear
power produces electricity without these specific adverse
environmental effects, nuclear reactors currently in use present their
own environmental challenges. For example, spent fuel is radioactive
and must be properly disposed of, and reactor cores must be constantly
cooled with water that is then discharged into adjacent bodies of
water, raising temperatures beyond levels that can sustain most living
organisms. Earthquakes and other natural disasters can damage reactors
and back-up safety systems, causing the release of high levels of
radioactivity into the ground, air, and water surrounding a nuclear
reactor, making the area uninhabitable. Particularly in the aftermath
of the Fukushima nuclear power plant disaster following Japan's
tsunami of 2011, cleaner, more reliable sources of energy for electric
power generation that are not accompanied by these adverse
environmental and health effects are being sought.

One approach to the search for an inexhaustible,
environmentally-friendly source of energy exploits a phenomenon of
nuclear physics in which the reaction product of two atomic nuclei has
a slightly smaller mass than the mass of the original particles, and
the mass difference is ultimately converted to heat energy. Only a
minute mass difference yields a very large amount of heat energy.
Thermonuclear reactions currently used to produce electric power, as
well as those used in the past to produce hydrogen bombs, employ this
phenomenon, which, as noted above, can be problematic.

The concept of low energy nuclear reactions (LENR), which also exploit
this phenomenon and were generally referred to previously as cold
fusion, has been under investigation for some time, but these
reactions did not live up to their initial promise. Low energy nuclear
reactions and their potential commercial applications have recently
received renewed focus, however. It has long been known that reactions
between atomic nuclei produce a significantly greater output of energy
than chemical reactions between molecules, although such nuclear
reactions usually require a correspondingly greater amount of energy
to initiate. A substantial benefit of low energy nuclear reactions is
that these nuclear reactions can be instituted at ordinary
temperatures, corresponding to less than 1 electron volt (eV), and can
achieve output energies in the range of one million eV or more. This
is also characteristic of nuclear reactions that require large amounts
of energy to initiate and large reactor facilities in which to conduct
the reactions. LENRs, in distinct contrast, need only a very small
fraction of the input energy, can be conducted on a much smaller
scale, and do not produce residual radioactivity or radioactive waste.
Until recently, however, these high energy producing reactions were
confined to laboratory scale investigations.

In 2011, Dr. Andrea Rossi demonstrated that low energy nuclear
reactions can produce the energy required for a 1 megawatt (MW)
thermal heat generating plant from nickel and hydrogen. The extremely
high energy density achieved was determined to be a factor of 100,000
or more compared to combustion processes using fossil fuels. With only
a low energy input, this system produces an environmentally clean
energy output without radioactive byproducts or carbon emissions. This
system is described and shown in U.S. Patent Application Publication
No. US2011/0005506. The LENRs on which the Rossi system is based are
weak interactions and neutron capture processes that happen in
nanometer to micron scale regions on surfaces of condensed matter at
room temperature. The reactions involved are high energy nuclear
reactions that transmute elements, primarily nickel to copper, but do
not generate radioactive waste.

U.S. Patent Application Publication No. US2007/0280398 to Dardik et al
and U.S. Pat. No. 7,244,887 to Miley disclose, respectively,
electrolytic cells for the creation of LENRs that generate heat and
electrolytic devices that may be used, inter alia, to generate heat,
convert heat to electricity, and/or cause transmutation reactions.
Miley additionally suggests electrolytic cells in which selected
metals react with hydrogen and/or deuterium, but in a different
arrangement than used by Rossi. None of the foregoing art, however,
suggests a high efficiency system or method for producing electricity
that converts heat generated by low energy nuclear reactions to
electricity using thermionic or thermotunneling converters or similar
devices.

The generation of electric power can be achieved by a variety of
devices and systems, including, for example, diesel generators,
thermoelectric converters, thermal electric power plants, and fuel
cells, which vary in their efficiency. Thermionic converters proposed
for electric current generation in the past have not only been
inefficient, but have required high operating temperatures. More
recent thermionic devices have been improved. However, neither these
nor other electrical power generating systems and devices have been
suggested as efficient producers of electric power from heat produced
by LENRs.

A need exists, therefore, for a high efficiency system and method for
generating electricity that combines the efficiencies of a LENR system
of producing heat and a thermionic converter designed to operate with
high efficiency to produce electricity from the heat produced by the
LENR system.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is a primary object of the present invention, therefore, to provide
a high efficiency system and method for generating electricity that
combines the efficiencies of a LENR system of producing heat and a
thermionic converter designed to operate with high efficiency to
produce electricity from the heat produced by the LENR system.

It is another object of the present invention to provide a high
efficiency electricity generation method and system capable of
operating at efficiencies as high as 80% of Carnot.

It is an additional object of the present invention to provide a high
efficiency electricity generation system and method that is
substantially free from adverse environmental effects associated with
available electricity generation systems from both fossil fuels and
nuclear reactors.

It is a further object of the present invention to provide a method
and system for efficiently producing electric power that is both
compact and expandable to be used to provide electricity in a
substantially unlimited range of applications.

It is yet a further object of the present invention to provide a
highly efficient sustainable system and method for generating
electrical energy from heat energy from relatively low temperature
energy sources.

In accordance with the aforesaid objects, a system and method for
generating electric power from relatively low temperature energy
sources at efficiency levels not previously available is provided. The
present system and method employ recent advances in low energy nuclear
reaction technology and thermionic/thermotunneling device technology,
first to generate heat, and then to convert a substantial portion of
the heat to usable electrical power. Heat is generated by a LENR
system premised on nuclear reactions, preferably those that occur in
readily available materials at ambient temperatures and do not require
high energy inputs or produce radioactive byproducts.

The heat generated by the LENR system is transferred through one or
more thermionic converters or similar devices in heat transfer
relationship with the LENR system to generate electric power.

Other objects and advantages will be apparent from the following
description, drawings, and claims.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic representation of an electrode useful in a
thermionic/thermotunneling converter device to generate electric
current in accordance with the present invention;

FIG. 2 shows a cross sectional view of a preferred thermionic
converter device, including the electrode of FIG. 1, useful for
producing electric power from heat generated by a LENR system
according to the present invention, showing active areas and the
direction of heat flow through the thermionic converter device; and

FIG. 3 is a diagrammatic representation of the system of the present
invention with one type of LENR system useful for generating heat to
be processed by the thermionic converter device of FIG. 2 for the high
efficiency generation of electric power.

DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
High efficiency systems and methods that produce electric power
without adverse environmental impact have been the subject of much
investigation, but available systems and methods have, thus far,
fallen short of the concomitant goals of providing electric power with
high efficiency and eliminating adverse environmental effects. It is
becoming increasingly clear that reliance on existing or even new
systems based on fossil fuels may not meet escalating global electric
power demands without negatively impacting environmental quality.
Although there may be available global fossil fuel reserves that have
not been fully exploited, the combustion of fossil fuel using current
technology to produce electricity can release undesirable levels of
carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur oxides. Reliance on nuclear power plants
for the electricity needs of a population dependent on electronic
devices is also problematic, for environmental and other reasons. The
present invention provides a unique alternative highly efficient power
generation system and method capable of providing a substantially
unlimited source of electric power without the potential adverse
environmental and other consequences that characterize available power
generation systems. The system and method of the present invention
uses a low energy nuclear reaction (LENR) system to produce heat,
which is converted to electric power by highly efficient
thermionic/thermotunneling converter devices in heat exchange
relationship with the LENR system. Both the preferred LENR system and
the preferred thermionic/thermotunneling devices are capable of highly
efficient operation at a wide range of levels.

Low energy nuclear reactions (LENR) are not based on nuclear fission
or fusion, but, rather, are much weaker interactions that occur in
condensed matter at ambient or room temperatures. Although weaker than
fission or fusion reactions, LENRs are capable of producing highly
energetic nuclear reactions and elemental transmutations. For
virtually any nuclear reaction, the energy released is typically
orders of magnitude greater than the energy released in a chemical
reaction involving the same quantities of the same or similar
reactants. LENRs, however, do not share the requirements or
disadvantages of other nuclear reactions, which include very high
input energy to start the process and the production of radioactive
waste that must be disposed of. LENR systems are being widely studied,
and a range of LENR systems has been proposed. Much of the
experimental work relating to LENR is described in the papers
available at www.lenr canr.org. There are many approaches to LENR
systems that generate heat, including those described in U.S. Patent
Application Publication No. US2007/0280398 to Dardik et al and U.S.
Pat. No. 7,244,887 to Miley, referred to above in the Background of
the Invention section. The LENR reactors described by Dardik et al and
Miley include electrolytic cells, and the materials of the components
of the electrolytic cells are selected to promote low energy nuclear
reactions. Any of the known LENR systems that is capable of generating
a supply of heat that can be converted to electrical energy by the
thermionic converters in heat transfer relationship with the LENR
system as described below could be used in the present system and
method for high efficiency electric power generation. The LENR systems
described herein are merely illustrative, and the present invention is
not intended to be limited to use with any one specific LENR system.

The LENR system described by Rossi in U.S. Patent Publication No.
2011/0005506, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by
reference, and available under the name E-Cat in Australia and
elsewhere is both compact and expandable and can be used effectively
with the present system and method. The Rossi LENR system is premised
on applying heat to a small amount of a micron-sized nickel powder in
the presence of a catalyst in a pressurized hydrogen atmosphere to
achieve a significant release of energy. Although the Rossi system is
based on a reaction between nickel and hydrogen, a range of other
nonradioactive metal elements may also be used to produce the desired
LENR system, and these metals are also contemplated for use in the
LENR system portion of the high efficiency electrical power generating
system and method of the present invention.

An illustrative reactor core with a volume on the order of about 50
cubic centimeters (cm3) can use a few grams of nickel or other metal
powder and a very small amount of hydrogen to safely produce about 10
kilowatts of heat. It has been demonstrated, for example, that the
LENR reactor system of Rossi is self-sustaining and can continue to
produce this amount of heat for six months or more. Additionally, if
the temperature of the reactor becomes too high, unlike the situation
in traditional nuclear reactors, the nickel or metal powder safely
melts, destroying the reaction sites so that the nickel becomes
unreactive, without the release of radioactive material. The addition
of more nickel or metal is essentially all that is required to restart
the process.

The energy produced by the reaction between nickel and hydrogen is
presently used in the Rossi system to heat water or to produce
saturated steam, primarily for applications requiring a reliable
source of industrial heat in the 1 megaWatt (MW) range. An appropriate
number of reaction vessel modules is connected together to provide
this amount of heat. A smaller version of the Rossi LENR system, which
is based on a single reaction vessel, is contemplated for residential
use to provide hot water and heat in the 10 kiloWatt (kW) range. The
connection of this LENR system to a typical diesel generator to
produce electric power has been suggested. Diesel generators, however,
present environmental and other problems. Not only are they very
noisy, but they require fossil fuels with their accompanying noxious
emissions for operation.

The high efficiency electricity generation system of the present
invention is designed to use the heat produced by the LENR system
described above or any other LENR system that effectively produces a
source of heat without the drawbacks of traditional nuclear reactions.
The heat produced by the LENR system is converted to electricity at a
very high level of efficiency, up to as high as about 80% of Carnot
efficiency, and preferably in the range of at least 50% of Carnot
efficiency. Electrical power can be generated with the present system
and method in an operating efficiency range of at least 10% of Carnot
to 80% of Carnot. This very high operating efficiency is preferably
achieved by one or more thermionic/thermotunneling converter devices
as described below. Presently available thermoelectric converter
devices used to produce electric energy claim to operate at higher
than 10% of Carnot, but their long term operation is actually closer
to about 5% of Carnot. The thermionic converters of the present
invention represent a significant improvement over these available
devices.

The thermionic/thermotunneling converter devices described herein can
be more specifically described with reference to the following terms:

“Thermionic or thermotunneling converter” is hereby defined as either
a device that uses a thermal gradient to create electrical power or a
device that uses electrical power or energy to pump heat, thereby
creating, maintaining, or degrading a thermal gradient. This may be
accomplished using thermionics, thermotunneling, Avto effect, or other
methods. In the present description of the invention,
“thermotunneling” is used by way of an example only. The terms “Avto
metal” and “Avto effect” are to be understood to describe a metal film
having a modified shape that alters the electron energy levels inside
an electrode modified accordingly, leading to a decrease in electron
work function. The Avto effect enables the custom design of electron
work function in a film or electrode to produce a desired work
function range measured in electron volts (eV). Further, as used
herein, the term “electrode” is intended to include either or both an
anode or a cathode, as appropriate.

Thermionic and thermotunneling converter devices may include at least
a pair of spaced electrodes maintained at a desired effective distance
from each other by spacers without requiring the presence of active
elements. Surfaces of such electrodes may or may not include Avto
metals patterning. Devices of this type and a method for making such
devices are described in commonly owned U.S. Patent Application
Publication No. US2009/0223548 by Walitzki et al, the disclosure of
which is incorporated herein by reference. The silicon-based devices
shown and described herein provide useful and effective thermionic
and/or thermotunneling converter devices. The owner of the present
invention presently develops and provides thermionic and
thermotunneling converter devices under the name POWER CHIPS™, as well
as other related products. POWER CHIPS™ refers to devices that use a
thermal gradient to create electric power. A preferred
thermionic/thermotunneling (POWER CHIPS™) device for use in the system
and method of the present invention is shown in FIGS. 1 and 2.

Referring to the drawings, FIG. 1 illustrates an Avto metal electrode
structure 10 modified with a repeating pattern that has the shape and
dimensions described below. The modified electrode may include a thin
metal film 12 on one surface of a selected substrate 14 and may have a
substantially planar surface with a pattern as shown and described
herein. The pattern may be a repeating series of indents 16, and each
indent may have a width b and a depth a relative to a height or
thickness of the metal film 12, which is represented by Lx+a. The film
12 is preferably a metal with a surface that is as planar as possible,
since surface roughness leads to the scattering of de Broglie waves
during operation of the device. The indents 16 on the metal film 12
may be part of a sharply defined geometric pattern, such as that
shown. Dimensions of indents may be selected that create a de Broglie
wave interference pattern resulting in a decrease in electron work
function. This facilitates emissions of electrons from a surface of
the electrode and promotes transfer of elementary particles across a
potential barrier. The surface configuration of the modified electrode
may resemble a corrugated pattern of squared-off, “u”-shaped ridges
and/or valleys. Alternatively, the pattern may be a regular pattern of
rectangular “plateaus” or “holes,” where the pattern resembles a
checkerboard. The walls of each indent 16 should be substantially
perpendicular to one another, and edges of indents should be sharp.
Methods of forming patterned electrode surfaces that produce the Avto
effect are described and shown in commonly owned U.S. Pat. No.
6,117,344 to Cox et al, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein
by reference.

While the dimensions of the indents required to produce the Avto
effect may vary, a depth in the range of approximately 5 to 20 times a
roughness of the surface and a width in the range of approximately 5
to 15 times the depth are preferred. The dimensions of the indents
affect the transfer of electrons through the preferred thermionic
and/or thermotunneling device and may be defined on a nanoscale level
in nanometers, and the specific dimensions selected may vary.

FIG. 2 shows, in cross-section, a thermionic converter 20 suitable for
use in the present system and method. The thermionic converter 20 may
include a pair of electrodes 22 and 24, preferably an anode and a
cathode that have facing surfaces with the configuration described
above in connection with FIG. 1, with a plurality of spacers 26 that
maintain the electrodes at a desired separation distance or gap 27.
The device of FIG. 2 is able to maintain higher efficiency levels with
much greater spacing between cathode and anode than has previously
been possible, largely because of higher thermal toleration.
Separation between electrodes may exceed the 50 nanometer gap distance
disclosed in commonly owned U.S. Pat. No. 6,417,060 referred to above
without sacrificing efficiency.

Each electrode 22 and 24 may have on surfaces facing the gap 27, the
preferred Avto metal structure shown in FIG. 1, although other
electrode structures may also be used. The electrodes of the
thermionic converter 20 preferably have identical dimensions. A bond
pad 28 may be positioned as shown at an end of and between the
electrodes 22 and 24 to hold them in place. An element 30 that
functions as an active area may be contiguous to and in heat transfer
contact with the electrode 22 and in heat transfer relationship and
thermal contact with a source of heat from one or more of the
aforementioned LENR systems. A second element 32 that also functions
as an active area may be contiguous to and in thermal contact with the
electrode 24 and in thermal contact and heat transfer relationship
with a heat sink. In the present system and method, the heat sink
structure may transfer current generated by the thermionic converter
20 to an electrical energy or power destination or system 66, as shown
and discussed in connection with FIG. 3 below. The elements 30 and 32
may or may not have Avto metals patterning. The thermal gradient
produced across the thermionic converter 20 may generate electric
current through a load in an external circuit, such as that
represented by structures 64 and 66 in FIG. 3.

Although the thermionic converter 20 may be positioned directly
between a heat source in contact with element 30 and a heat sink in
contact with element 32, this is not intended to limit the scope of
the present invention, but is provided to illustrate one possible
arrangement of the heat transfer/electric power generation system of
the present invention. Various methods for connecting thermionic
converters in heat transfer relationship to a heat source produced by
LENRs are possible and are contemplated to be within the scope of the
present invention. A heat sink in thermal contact with the element 32
of the thermionic converter 20 may also be any one of a number of
suitable heat sink structures for transferring heat energy to be
transformed to electrical energy.

In some applications, in addition to the transfer of electric energy
from the thermionic converter 20 to one or more external circuits, any
waste heat at the heat sink in thermal contact with the element 32 or
heat that is not converted to electrical energy may also be
transferred, for example to a home heating or hot water system. In
accordance with the present invention, one or more thermionic
converters could be attached or otherwise secured and positioned in
heat transfer relationship between components of a LENR system and
components of an electrical power system.

Arrows 40 in FIG. 2 indicate the direction in which heat may flow
through the thermionic converter 20 elements 30 and 32. Arrows 42
indicate the path along which the heat may travel through the
electrodes 22 and 24. Elements 30 and 32 may not be in close proximity
to the bond pad 28 holding the electrodes 22 and 24 in place, but may
be separated by a distance represented by the arrow 44. As a result,
there may be very little thermal leakage through the bond pad 28. In
addition, edge thermal losses may be reduced when the effective area
of the thermionic converter device 20 is enlarged or when length of
the thermal path is increased by methods well known in the art.

Element 30, which is in contact with the low temperature side of the
thermionic converter device of the present invention, may be formed of
a suitable heat transfer material, such as, for example without
limitation, a heat transfer material that can be formed directly on
the electrode 22. Element 32, which is in contact with the high
temperature side of the thermoelectric converter device of the present
invention, may be formed from any one of a variety of materials
suitable for heat transfer and/or the transfer of electric energy in a
high temperature area. Suitable materials for these purposes may be
selected from those available for this purpose.

FIG. 3 is a schematic illustration of one possible arrangement of a
high efficiency electric power generating system 50 in accordance with
the present invention. One kind of LENR system 50 that is currently
available and may be used with present system is shown in FIG. 3. This
is only one type of LENR system; it is contemplated that any other
suitable LENR system that produces heat that can be converted to
electric power as described herein could also be used in the present
system. Not all LENR systems will necessarily include the components
shown and described, which are intended merely to be illustrative. One
suitable LENR system may include a reaction chamber or reactor 52 that
is designed to accommodate a reaction vessel 54 containing the
reactants and/or electrolytic cells required to produce an exothermic
low energy nuclear reaction. A suitable heat source 60, capable of
producing temperatures in the range required to start the reactions,
provides this energy. Once the low energy nuclear reaction gets
started, heat will be produced continuously by the reaction, and the
heat source 60 may be inactivated. The reaction vessel 54 may be
contained within a fluid-filled inner jacket 56 to provide a heat
transfer fluid to be heated by the LENR. The heat transfer fluid could
be a suitable liquid or gas. The LENR system may further include a
lead or steel-coated lead outer jacket 58, or any other appropriate
barrier material, to prevent the release of any radiation outside the
system. Heat transfer fluid within the inner jacket 56 is heated by
the heat produced by particle decay and nuclear transformations
resulting from LENRs. This thermal energy may be transferred from the
reactor 54 to, for example, a secondary fluid line 62 in heat transfer
relationship with an element 30 in contact with an active area on the
thermionic converter 20 of FIG. 2. This arrangement may be varied as
required for a particular LENR system and is not intended to limit the
scope of the present invention.

Heat entering the thermionic converter 20 from the fluid line 62 may
be transferred along the path designated by arrows 40 and 42 (FIG. 2)
to a heat sink in contact with element 32. As heat is transferred, the
movement of electrons across the specifically configured electrodes,
described in connection with FIG. 1, generates an electric current
that can be directed out of the thermionic converter 20 through a
suitable electrical connection 64 and/or electric circuits to provide
electric power to a power destination 66.

While only one thermionic converter 20 is shown in FIG. 3, it is
contemplated that any number of thermionic converters may be provided
in thermal contact with a LENR system as needed to generate whatever
amount of electric power is required. Since the preferred size of the
basic reaction vessel 52 may be relatively small (about 50 cm3 in one
LENR system), and the thermionic converter preferably may have a
longest dimension in the range of about one inch (2.2 cm), the overall
size of the present high efficiency electricity generating system can
be quite small. The size of the system can be increased by connecting
modules of LENR system reaction vessels and thermionic converters. The
size flexibility and combined efficiencies possible with a suitable
LENR system and thermionic converters of the present invention may
allow the efficient generation of electric power in an essentially
unlimited range of situations.

While the present invention has been described with respect to a
limited number of embodiments, those skilled in the art will
appreciate numerous modifications and variations therefrom. It is
intended that the appended claims cover all such modifications and
variations as fall within the true spirit and scope of this present
invention.

INDUSTRIAL APPLICABILITY
The present invention will find its primary applicability in providing
a highly efficient electricity generating system that functions
effectively at low cost in a wide range of possible applications.

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