Progress Toward High Power Output in Thermionic Energy Converters

Abstract Thermionic energy converters are solid‐state heat engines that have the potential to produce electricity with efficiencies of over 30% and area‐specific power densities of 100 Wcm−2. Despite this prospect, no prototypes reported in the literature have achieved true efficiencies close to thi...

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Main Authors: Matthew F. Campbell, Thomas J. Celenza, Felix Schmitt, Jared W. Schwede, Igor Bargatin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-05-01
Series:Advanced Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202003812
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spelling doaj-8000c7f76fed47a08280bb41df528e852021-05-05T07:56:42ZengWileyAdvanced Science2198-38442021-05-0189n/an/a10.1002/advs.202003812Progress Toward High Power Output in Thermionic Energy ConvertersMatthew F. Campbell0Thomas J. Celenza1Felix Schmitt2Jared W. Schwede3Igor Bargatin4Department of Mechanical Engineering and Applied Mechanics University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia PA 19104 USADepartment of Mechanical Engineering and Applied Mechanics University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia PA 19104 USASpark Thermionics, Inc. Emeryville CA 94608 USASpark Thermionics, Inc. Emeryville CA 94608 USADepartment of Mechanical Engineering and Applied Mechanics University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia PA 19104 USAAbstract Thermionic energy converters are solid‐state heat engines that have the potential to produce electricity with efficiencies of over 30% and area‐specific power densities of 100 Wcm−2. Despite this prospect, no prototypes reported in the literature have achieved true efficiencies close to this target, and many of the most recent investigations report power densities on the order of mWcm−2 or less. These discrepancies stem in part from the low‐temperature (<1300 K) test conditions used to evaluate these devices, the large vacuum gap distances (25–100 µm) employed by these devices, and material challenges related to these devices' electrodes. This review will argue that, for feasible electrode work functions available today, efficient performance requires generating output power densities of >1 Wcm−2 and employing emitter temperatures of 1300 K or higher. With this result in mind, this review provides an overview of historical and current design architectures and comments on their capacity to realize the efficiency and power potential of thermionic energy converters. Also emphasized is the importance of using standardized efficiency metrics to report thermionic energy converter performance data.https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202003812efficiencyheat transferpower densitythermionic energy conversion
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Matthew F. Campbell
Thomas J. Celenza
Felix Schmitt
Jared W. Schwede
Igor Bargatin
spellingShingle Matthew F. Campbell
Thomas J. Celenza
Felix Schmitt
Jared W. Schwede
Igor Bargatin
Progress Toward High Power Output in Thermionic Energy Converters
Advanced Science
efficiency
heat transfer
power density
thermionic energy conversion
author_facet Matthew F. Campbell
Thomas J. Celenza
Felix Schmitt
Jared W. Schwede
Igor Bargatin
author_sort Matthew F. Campbell
title Progress Toward High Power Output in Thermionic Energy Converters
title_short Progress Toward High Power Output in Thermionic Energy Converters
title_full Progress Toward High Power Output in Thermionic Energy Converters
title_fullStr Progress Toward High Power Output in Thermionic Energy Converters
title_full_unstemmed Progress Toward High Power Output in Thermionic Energy Converters
title_sort progress toward high power output in thermionic energy converters
publisher Wiley
series Advanced Science
issn 2198-3844
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Abstract Thermionic energy converters are solid‐state heat engines that have the potential to produce electricity with efficiencies of over 30% and area‐specific power densities of 100 Wcm−2. Despite this prospect, no prototypes reported in the literature have achieved true efficiencies close to this target, and many of the most recent investigations report power densities on the order of mWcm−2 or less. These discrepancies stem in part from the low‐temperature (<1300 K) test conditions used to evaluate these devices, the large vacuum gap distances (25–100 µm) employed by these devices, and material challenges related to these devices' electrodes. This review will argue that, for feasible electrode work functions available today, efficient performance requires generating output power densities of >1 Wcm−2 and employing emitter temperatures of 1300 K or higher. With this result in mind, this review provides an overview of historical and current design architectures and comments on their capacity to realize the efficiency and power potential of thermionic energy converters. Also emphasized is the importance of using standardized efficiency metrics to report thermionic energy converter performance data.
topic efficiency
heat transfer
power density
thermionic energy conversion
url https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202003812
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