Dr.
William W. JACQUES
Coal Battery
Harper's New
Monthly Magazine (1896)
Electrical Review 38 (970): 826 (26 June
1896)
US Patent # 555,511
William Jacques' "Coal Battery" was claimed to operate
with 82% efficiency; his critics, however, showed that he
neglected to consider the thermal energy of the furnace and the
power consumed by the air pump. As a result, the actual
efficiency was only 8%. Furthermore, subsequent research
concluded that the apparatus produced power by thermolectric
action, not by electrochemistry. Jacques specifically speculated
in his patent that "The phenomenon of electrolytic action causes
the conversion of the potential energy of the carbon into
electrical energy instead of heat, as is the case when oxygen
combines with the carbon without the intervention of an
electrolyte. It is desirable in order to facilitate the chemical
action, and consequently obtain a more considerable current of
electricity, to thoroughly impregnate the electrolyte with
oxygen, and this may be done by admitting the air..." In the
article published in Harper's, the battery action was explained
thus:: "That the electric current was due to the chemical
combination of the oxygen of the air with the coke (carbon),
there could be no doubt. Quantitative tests showed that oxygen
was taken from the air; that carbon was consumed; that carbonic
acid was formed. Moreover, the electromotive force obtained
agreed almost exactly with that which is theoretically obtained
from the combustion of oxygen with carbon to form carbonic acid
(1.04 volts). That the phenomenon was not due to thermoelectric
action was proved by the fact that when the whole apparatus was
so enclosed that all the parts were kept at uniform temperature
the maximum, the maximum electromotive force and current were
obtained. Again. Later experiments with far larger apparatus
have not only confirmed these results, but have shown that under
proper conditions the electrical energy thus obtained is
substantially equal to the potential energy of the weight of
carbon consumed within the pot..."
Harper's New Monthly Magazine
(Date unknown; circa 1896)
"Electricity Direct from Coal"
A lump of cannel is burning on the grate. What takes place? The
air is drawn in beneath the grate and rises through the bars.
Its oxygen combines with the coal to produce carbonic acid gas,
which, together with the inert nitrogen of the air and the smoke
or unconsumed carbon, rises in the chimney and escapes. This is
the role played by the materials. How about the forces?
The chemical union of oxygen with the coal sets free the coal’s
stored-up energy, and this energy, being indestructible, must
manifest itself in some way, and so shows itself as heat.
This is the whole story of combustion.
Sitting before an open fire I have often dreamed of
converting the stored-up energy of the coal into some form of
energy even more useful to man than heat. We know that,
theoretically at least, all of nature’s forces are
inter-convertible; why should not the potential energy of coal
be converted directly into electricity instead of heat? Could
all of the energy be extracted from a single pound of coal and
made to do mechanical work, this work would more than equal a
day’s labor of a very strong man. In the great coal-fields that
are distributed over the surface of the earth, nature has stored
up a supply of energy safely estimated to equal the hand labor
of the entire population of the world continued for a thousand
years.
The most convenient and useful, and therefore the most
tractable, form of energy is electricity. In the facility with
which we may at will and without waste convert it into such
other forms of energy as happens to be desired lies the
superiority of electricity over all the rest of nature’s forces.
Having electricity, we may easily produce heat or light, or
mechanical motion, or chemical force; but electricity itself has
hitherto been produced in quantity only by the use of
complicated mechanism and with great waste.
Electricity today is generated by a dynamo that is
turned by an engine which is operates by steam, and the steam is
made from water by means of heat derived from the combustion of
coal. But this is a long and circuitous process, with a large
leakage at every step. Much of the energy of combustion goes up
the chimney as heat or smoke; much of the heat is lost in
boiling the water to make steam; much of the expansive force of
the steam is wasted as it escapes from the engine; much of the
power of the engine is wasted as friction; and there is some
loss in the dynamo itself. Recent tests, made by a committee of
the National Electric Light Association, show that the average
plant wastes 97.4 per cent and utilizes as electricity only 2.6
per cent of the energy theoretically obtainable from the coal.
The problem then was to convert the energy of coal
more directly into electricity; to do away with the dynamo and
the steam engine; possibly even to do away with heat itself.
A multitude of experiments were made. In the earlier
days my attempt was merely to do away with the dynamo and with
steam, and convert heat into electricity. A fire of coke,
burning on an insulated grate, gave some slight electrical
manifestations, but they were not encouraging. Experiments with
various novel forms of thermopile were tried, but a
consideration of the theory of the subject soon made it evident
that it was not even theoretically possible to convert more than
a very small percentage of the energy of the coal into
electricity in this way. The generation of electric currents by
alternately heating and cooling the magnetic cores of wire coils
gave no promise of efficient results. I tried nature’s plan of
producing lightning -- the evaporation of water continual
dissipation of vapor globules -- and though I succeeded in
producing miniature thunderstorms, the quantity of electricity
obtainable was not sufficient for any commercial use. Indeed, my
researches have led me to doubt whether the total energy of a
good brisk thunderstorm, dramatic as is its display, is equal to
fire. For a minute fraction of a second the force of a stroke of
lightning is terrific, but its duration is so brief that even if
it could be harnessed, it would be capable of doing very little
useful work. Many other plans, all of them intensely interesting
from a purely scientific point of view, were tried; but from
most of them no current was obtained that was economically
capable of being put to any industrial use.
Nature is a coy mistress, yet she likes to be wooed,
and to the diligent suitor gives occasional tokens of
encouragement; and it happened that one day I surprised her in
secret, and discovered the way by which we may abandon even
combustion and heat itself, and convert the stored-up energy of
coal directly into electricity.
It came to me almost as a revelation that if the
oxygen of the air could be made to combine with the coal under
such circumstances that the production of heat could be
prevented, and at the same time a conducting path could be
provided in which a current of electricity [missing line in
the text] the coal for the oxygen would necessarily be
converted into electricity and not into heat; for any given form
of electricity will be converted into such other form as the
surrounding conditions make most easy. Given the proper
conditions, the potential energy of coal would rather convert
itself into electricity than into heat.
This led to experiments in which coal was submerged in
a liquid so that the oxygen of the air would not come in direct
contact with the coal and produce combustion. Further, such a
liquid was chosen that when air was forced through it to the
coal, the oxygen of the air would temporarily enter into
chemical union with the liquid and then be crowded out by a
further supply of oxygen and forced to combine with the coal. We
may picture each successive atom of oxygen, on its way from the
source of air supply through the liquid to the coal, as
temporarily entering into chemical union with each of a row of
atoms of the liquid, just as each successive man as he circles
around in the "grand right and left" of dancing temporarily
clasps hand with each of the ladies of the set. When one
substance passes through another in this way it furnishes a path
in which an electric current may flow, so that by causing the
oxygen to combine with the carbon through he intervening liquid
opportunity is furnished for an electric current to develop, and
since combustion cannot take place, the chemical affinity of the
coal for the oxygen is converted directly into electricity, and
not into heat. Liquids which thus allow atoms of oxygen and a
current of electricity to pass through them may be called
"electrolytic carriers".
I have thus discovered what I believe to be a new fact
or principle not hitherto known to natural science -- a
principal which I hope may be as valuable to pure science as my
invention promises to be valuable to the useful arts. Stated
scientifically, my discovery is that if oxygen of the air be
cause to combine with carbon, not directly as in combustion, but
through an intervening electrolytic carrier, the stored up
energy of the carbon may be converted directly into electrical
energy, and not into heat.
Crudely speaking, my invention consists in generating
electricity by causing the oxygen of the air to combine with
coal beneath the level of a suitable liquid.
The invention is a process; it is not a machine. The
process may be carried on with very simple apparatus. An early
form of apparatus consisted of a platinum crucible of the size
and shape of an after-dinner coffee cup, partially filled with
common potash, that was kept liquid by suspending the crucible
over a gas flame. Within the potash was suspended, by means of a
platinum wire, a lump of ordinary coke of the size of a peanut.
Into the molten potash a stream of air was blown by means of a
platinum tube like a straw. The wire by which the carbon was
suspended formed the negative pole, and a second wire attached
to the crucible the positive pole, of the generator. Attaching
these wires to a small electric motor, I found that when air was
blown into the potash the motor started; when the current of air
was interrupted, the motor stopped. From this minute apparatus a
current of several amperes was obtained. The electromotive force
was a little over one volt.
That the electric current was due to the chemical
combination of the oxygen of the air with the coke (carbon),
there could be no doubt. Quantitative tests showed that oxygen
was taken from the air; that carbon was consumed; that carbonic
acid was formed. Moreover, the electromotive force obtained
agreed almost exactly with that which is theoretically obtained
from the combustion of oxygen with carbon to form carbonic acid
(1.04 volts). That the phenomenon was not due to thermoelectric
action was proved by the fact that when the whole apparatus was
so enclosed that all the parts were kept at uniform temperature
the maximum, the maximum electromotive force and current were
obtained. Again. Later experiments with far larger apparatus
have not only confirmed these results, but have shown that under
proper conditions the electrical energy thus obtained is
substantially equal to the potential energy of the weight of
carbon consumed within the pot.
The invention had now been made. Electricity had been
obtained directly from carbon. Would it work on a larger scale?
Could the numerous practical difficulties be overcome? Platinum
is more expensive even than gold, and hence some other metal
must be used. Iron was tried, but the current obtained when the
invention was practiced in an iron vessel was very small.
Vessels of copper, lead, zinc, tin, aluminum, nickel,
magnesium, were destroyed. Gold and silver gave good results,
but inferior to platinum. Again and again the experiments were
repeated. There seemed to be no reason in theory why iron should
not work as well as platinum, and vessels were made from samples
of iron of all kinds.
Finally the reason was found. Most specimens of iron
have an oily surface, which when heated, becomes converted into
carbon, so that the iron tends to the action of the proper
carbon itself. This led to a method of cleansing the surface of
the iron; and when properly cleansed an iron pot is as good as
one of platinum, and of course far cheaper.
The pots were now made larger and larger, until today
they are made as large as a barrel; and the current is measured
in hundreds of amperes.
Numerous other difficulties have had to be overcome.
Coal, as it comes to us from the mines, is not a good conductor
of electricity, and though an experimental apparatus was
constructed in which it was found possible to consume ordinary
coke shoveled onto a submerged grate, it has been found best to
crush the coal and mould it into large sticks of convenient size
to handle, and bake them to drive off the included gases and
give them good electrical conductivity.
The rapidity with which the carbon is consumed, and
consequently the strength of the electric current yielded by a
cell, is greatly increased by thoroughly impregnating all parts
of the liquid with an excess of oxygen; and this is best done by
terminating the air supply pipe in a rose nozzle something like
that of a watering pot, so that the air is injected into the
liquid in a large number of fine sprays.
There are many kinds of liquid that may be used as
electrolytic carriers, but unfortunately the most suitable
become liquid only at elevated temperatures; so a certain amount
of coal or other fuel has to be burned on a grate beneath the
pots to maintain this temperature. As, however, there is no
considerable consumption of heat, excepting as it is used in
warming the incoming air or is lost by radiation, we may expect
that in large apparatus, where a large number of pots are
enclosed in a reasonably heat-tight oven, the consumption of
coal on the grate will become comparatively very small. Even
with a small two-horsepower apparatus, in which no very great
precautions were taken to retain the heat, measurements showed
that only one-third of a pound of coal per electrical horsepower
hour was burned on a grate. A steam engine and dynamo of
equivalent power would have consumed at least 40 times as much.
Molten potash has many advantages as an electrolytic
carrier, but it has the disadvantage of absorbing more or less
of the carbonic acid given off by the carbon or contained in the
air; so that if potash be used, although a part of the carbonic
acid is swept away by the nitrogen, and more may be carried to
the surface and liberated by adding to the potash suitable
carriers of carbonic acid, sooner or later the potash becomes
contaminated and has to be cleansed. By choosing electrolytic
carriers that have no affinity for carbonic acid, the need of
frequent cleansing is avoided since, fortunately, the
consumption of the carbon is so much more complete than it is in
ordinary combustion that with reasonably pure grades of coal
only a small amount of easily removable ash is formed.
The quantity of current that may be taken from a pot
is about three-quarters of an ampere per square inch of carbon
surface; so that a pot containing six sticks of carbon, each
three inches in diameter and eighteen inches long, a size
conveniently manufactured, handled and used, yields about 750
amperes, or a little more than one electrical horsepower. The
electromotive force of each pot, whether large or small, is a
little more than one volt. When greater voltage is desired, the
requisite number of pots are connected in series and heated in
one common oven. The air is pumped in by means of an
electrically driven air pump, operated by a small portion of the
current generated.
It would be premature to attempt to give any final
data as to the efficiency of the new process when practiced on a
large scale. Improvements are constantly being made. As compared
with modern steam-engines, only relatively small carbon electric
generators have as yet been built; and it should be remembered
that with this generator, as with the steam engine, increased
size means increased efficiency per pound of coal, particularly
in the coal consumed on the grate. Following, however, are some
results of a test (made by experts not connected with the
development of the invention) upon a small and comparatively
crude two horsepower carbon electric generator that has been in
occasional use for some six months:
Average electrical HP developed: 2.16 HP
Average electrical HP used by air pump: 0.11 “ "
Average net electrical HP developed: 2.05 "
Carbon consumed in pots per electrical HP: 0.223 lb
Coal consumed on grate per electrical HP: 0.336 "
Total fuel consumed per electrical HP: 0.559 "
Electricity obtained from 1 lb of coal*: 1336 watt hours (32% of
that theoretically obtainable)
(* 0.4 lb in pots & 0.6 lb on grate)
Thus the efficiency of this particular generator was
12 times greater than that of the average electric light and
power plant in use in this country, and 40 times greater than
plants of corresponding size.
There are, however, many details still to be worked
out, and many improvements yet to be made, before the carbon
electric generator can be put into general commercial use on a
scale comparable with that of modern steam engines. Contrary to
some statements that I have read, I believe it will be some time
yet before the dynamo is relegated to the attic with the
spinning wheel, or the wheels of the steam engine cease to
revolve.
It is interesting to speculate as to what may be the
outcome of this discovery when, in the fullness of time, all of
these details shall have been worked out.
The first great field for this invention is power. The
invention of the steam engine soon doubled the productive
capacity of the labor of the world. In this country alone it is
today doing work equal to the hand labor of 100 million men, or
a population of 350 million people. Now comes a power many times
as efficient as steam, and much more convenient.
There appears to be no insurmountable obstacle to the
construction of carbon electric generators that shall heat and
light our railway trains, and propel them with a velocity of 100
miles an hour. Since electricity, like steam, may be applied
directly as a rotary motion to every pair of wheels throughout
the train, not only cold the train be safely propelled with
great velocity, but it could be started and stopped quickly, and
would be under perfect control. There would be no cinders or
smoke.
Our transatlantic liners -- no longer "steamships" --
would not then find a limit o speed set by fuel-carrying
capacity. The greater part of the space now given up to coal,
and all that is now devoted to boilers and engines, would be
available for passengers and freight... &c. [Rex Note: The
closing paragraph is missing in my copy of this article] Figure
1: An Elementary Cell ~ Taken apart to show iron pot,
stick of carbon with iron suspension, andair supply pipe with
nozzle. This carbon is 20 inches long and 10 inches in
circumference, and yields a current of about 150 amperes. The
eelctromotive force is 1 volt.
Figure 2: Carbon Electric Generator ~ Operating an
electrc motor. This generator consists of a heat-tight oven
within which six cells flike Fig. 1 are connected in series, and
suspended over a coal-burning grate.
Figure 3: Large Carbon Electric Generator ~ With which
experiments are now being made. The brick oven is 10 feet square
and 6 feet high. Two of the cells are shown removed. Each
contains 6 carbons 3 feet long. It is expected that, when
perfected, this generator will yield about 40 electric
horsepower.
The Electrical Review 38 (970): 826 (26 June 1896)
~
100
cells in series on top of furnace (Electrolyte temperature:
400-500° C); Output: 16 A / 90 V )
"A carbon, C, is plunged into a solution of caustic
soda, E. A pump, A, forces air into a perforated
nozzle, R, which distributes the air uniformly in the
electrolyte. The positive pole is fixed upon the iron receiver,
I, containing the solution, and the negative pole [B]
upon the carbon which is supported and insulated from the
receiver by a collar, S. Two tubes, o and i,
serve for the admission and discharge of the solution."
U.S Patent # 555,511 (3
March 1896) Method of Converting
Potential Energy of Carbon into Electrical Energy
William W. Jacques
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, William W. Jacques, of Newton,
in the State of Massachusetts, have invented a new and useful
Method or Process of Converting the Potential Energy of Carbon
or Carbonaceous Materials into Electrical Energy. Of which the
following is a specification.
It is well know that carbon and carbonaceous
materials -- such as anthracite and bituminous coals, coke and
gas-carbon -- have a chemical affinity for oxygen, and that
when brought at a proper temperature in contact with oxygen,
whether pure or diluted, as in the case of air, such carbons
enter into chemical combination with the oxygen and the
potential energy of the coal is converted into heat. This
process is known as "combustion".
I have discovered that if oxygen, whether pure or
diluted, as in air, be caused to combine with carbon or
carbonaceous materials, not directly, as in the case of
combustion, but through an intervening electrolyte, the
potential energy of the carbon may be converted directly into
electrical energy instead of into heat.
My invention is founded on this discovery; and it
consists in the process of converting the potential energy of
carbon or carbonaceous materials into electrical energy by
chemically combining oxygen with said carbon or carbonaceous
material through an intervening electrolyte.
A convenient and practical way of carrying out my
invention is to immerse a cylinder of carbon in molten sodium
hydrate and force a current or blast of air into the molten
sodium hydrate in such manner that the sodium hydrate becomes
saturated with oxygen in excess over that which the sodium
hydrate normally contains. A circuit being completed from the
sodium hydrate, which is the electrolyte, by means of a
collecting electrode not chemically acted upon by the
electrolyte and an extraneous conductor to the carbon an
electric current flows continuously from the sodium hydrate
through the collecting electrode and the exterior conductor to
the carbon, the strength of the current depending primarily on
the rapidity with which the air is blown into the sodium
hydrate, and the oxygen of the air caused to combine with the
carbon.
In this process the carbon is gradually converted
into carbonic acid, which mostly bubbles up through the
electrolyte and escapes. The resultant composition of the
sodium hydroxide remains unchanged, excepting as hereinafter
explained, and oxygen from the air is consumed. The nitrogen
with which the oxygen of the air is diluted, having no
chemical affinity for any other substance present, simply
bubbles through the electrolyte and escapes. The sodium
hydrate is contained in a vessel of pure iron, upon which it
has no sensible chemical action when melted, and this iron
vessel serves as the collecting electrode or positive pole of
the generator, while the carbon forms the oxidizable electrode
or negative pole.
My conception of the function of the electrolyte is
that it carries oxygen electrolytically from the air to the
carbon, or that the phenomenon of electrolytic action causes
the conversion of the potential energy of the carbon into
electrical energy instead of heat, as is the case when oxygen
combines with the carbon without the intervention of an
electrolyte. It is desirable in order to facilitate the
chemical action, and consequently obtain a more considerable
current of electricity, to thoroughly impregnate the
electrolyte with oxygen, and this may be done by admitting the
air under pressure in a considerable number of fine sprays. It
is also desirable to maintain a constant circulation to the
electrolyte, so that new portions, freshly charged with
oxygen, may successively be brought in contact with the
carbon. Such circulation is well obtained by the ebullition
into which the electrolyte is thrown by the admission of air
under pressure. Again, it is desirable, in order to prevent
the setting up of electromotive forces opposed to the proper
electromotive force of the generator, to keep the whole body
of the electrolyte and the contained carbons and containing
vessel, used also as a collector, at a more or less uniform
temperature throughout, and this is conveniently done by the
ebullition of the electrolyte due to the air forced in. Again,
the constant ebullition of the electrolyte removes from the
surface of the consumed carbon such ash and other products of
chemical action as may form upon it, thus leaving fresh
surfaces exposed to the action of the electrolyte.
Figure 1 shows a suitable apparatus for
practicing my invention, making use of sodium hydrate as an
electrolyte and air as a source of oxygen supply. Figure 2
is a plan view of the "rose" for distributing the air.

I is a pot, of pure iron. Good rolled Norway iron
answers the purpose.
E is the electrolyte, which in this case is
caustic soda (sodium hydrate). It need not be free from the
usual impurities found in the commercial article.
C is the carbon, which must be, when placed
in the electrolyte, a good conductor of electricity.
B is a metallic clamp for making a good
electrical connection between the carbon and the lead wire w2
.
p2 is the binding post by which the lead wire
u2 is connected by the metal clamp B.
p’ is the binding post by which the lead wire
w’ is connected to the iron pot I.
F is a furnace surrounding the generator and
used to keep the generator and the inclosed electrolyte at the
proper temperature (say 400-500o centigrade).
A is an air pump that forces air through the
tube T into the rose R, from which it is
forced into the electrolyte in a number of fine sprays. The
rose R is shown also in plan in Figure 2. It
is made of some metal not acted upon by the electrolyte and is
pierced with a large number of fine pinholes, as shown.
S is a cover of non-conducting material,
which serves also to support the carbon and insulate it from
the iron pot.
v is a vent for allowing the refuse gases to
escape.
o is an outlet for drawing off the
electrolyte when contaminated, and I is an inlet for
supplying fresh electrolyte.
The apparatus being put together as shown and the
electrolyte having been brought to the proper temperature, the
pump A is operated and air is forced into the
electrolyte, causing a violent ebullition, which ebullition
supplies to the electrolyte an excess of oxygen, brings fresh
portions of the electrolyte continually in contact with the
carbon, detaches the carbonic acid and ash formed on the
surface of the carbon, and keeps the whole interior of the
generator at a uniform temperature.
Although the greater part of the carbonic acid,
whether resulting from the union of carbon and oxygen or
already existing in the air supply, bubbles up through the
electrolyte and escapes, a portion of this carbonic acid
combines with a portion of the caustic soda to form carbonate
of soda, and this, together with the ash from the carbon,
slowly contaminates the electrolyte, and in the course of time
lessens its efficiency. The efficiency of the generator may,
however, be maintained by drawing off from time to time a
portion of the contaminated electrolyte and admitting a fresh
portion to take its place.
The contaminated electrolyte may be purified by
well-known simple processes.
The contamination of the caustic soda by its union
with carbonic acid may be reduced, and its life consequently
prolonged, by adding a small percentage of oxide of magnesium.
My conception of the action of the oxide of magnesium is that
the free carbonic acid combines with it in preference to the
caustic soda, and that the carbonate of magnesium so formed is
quickly decomposed into carbonic acid, which escapes, and
oxide of magnesium which is again ready to repeat its action.
Briefly, the oxide of magnesium serves as a carrier to convey
the carbonic acid through the electrolyte.
My invention is not limited to the particular
electrolyte above mentioned, nor to the air as a source of
oxygen supply, nor to the apparatus described above.
There are many electrolytes that may be used in
practicing my invention. Following are some of the desirable
characteristics: They should become liquid t a convenient
temperature. They should possess good electrolytic
conductivity. They should be capable of readily taking up
oxygen from the air or other source of supply, and also
capable of readily giving up oxygen in combination with the
carbon. They should not have a strong affinity for carbonic
acid, and, in case air is used as a source of oxygen supply,
should not have any considerable affinity for the nitrogen and
other substances with which the oxygen of the air is diluted.
The molten hydrates of potash and soda are especially suitable
for practical use.
Instead of using the air as a source of oxygen
supply, it is evident that I may use oxygen artificially
prepared by any of the well-known methods, and, as might
naturally be supposed, the chemical action takes place more
rapidly with pure oxygen than when the oxygen is diluted, as
in air.
The air or oxygen may be supplied to the electrolyte
in a heated condition.
The collecting electrode or positive pole, which may
or may not be made of conducting material not considerably
acted upon by the electrolyte, from which action, however, the
current flow from the electrolyte to the collecting electrode
tends to protect the latter. Platinum is almost universally
applicable, though expensive. Pure iron is very generally
applicable and inexpensive. Steel and iron containing any
considerable quantity of carbon should be avoided, in that
they may set up an inverse electromotive force, which
materially reduces the efficiency of the generator.
Forms of carbon that I have found convenient for use
are gas-carbon, anthracite coal that has been baked as to give
it conducitivity, bituminous coal from which sufficient o the
hydrocarbons have been driven off to give it conductivity,
charcoal, and in fact any form of carbon or carbonaceous
material which has or to which may be given sufficient
conductivity to allow of the conduction of the electric
current to or from the seat of chemical action. I prefer to
mold the carbon into one or more solid cylinders or plates
(which may be done by well known processes) as excellent
electrical connection may be conveniently made between such
carbons and the lead wires.
The volume of current from such a generator as I
have described is very large, but the voltage is smaller than
is demanded for most commercial purposes. Greater voltage may
of course be obtained by coupling any desired number of
generators in series, or the voltage from a single generator
may be increased at the expense of the volume of current by
well-known methods of transformation.
I claim:
1) The method of converting the potential energy of
carbon or carbonaceous materials into electrical energy, which
consists in chemically combining oxygen with said carbon or
carbonaceous materials through an intervening electrolyte.
2) The method of converting the potential energy of
carbon or carbonaceous materials into electrical energy, which
consists in chemically combining oxygen with said carbon or
carbonaceous materials by impregnating an intervening
electrolyte with an excess of oxygen.
3) The method of converting the potential energy of
carbon or carbonaceous materials into electrical energy, which
consists in chemically combining oxygen with said carbon or
carbonaceous materials by impregnating an intervening
electrolyte with air.
4) The method of converting the potential energy of
carbon or carbonaceous materials into electrical energy, which
consists in chemically combining oxygen with said carbon or
carbonaceous materials by impregnating a molten basic
electrolyte with oxygen or air and collecting the electricity
from the electrolyte by an electrode not chemically acted upon
by said impregnated electrolyte when the circuit is completed.
5) The herein described process of generating
electricity through the combination of oxygen with carbon by
supplying a blast of oxygen or air to a carbon electrode
through an electrolyte.
6) The herein described process of generating
electricity through the combination of oxygen with carbon by
supplying a blast of oxygen or air to a carbon electrode
through molten sodium or potassium hydrate.
7) As a generator of electricity by the chemical
combination of carbon with oxygen, an oxidizable electrode of
carbon or carbonaceous material, an electrolyte continuously
impregnated with oxygen and a collecting electrode not
chemically acted upon by said impregnated electrode when the
circuit is completed.
8) As a generator of electricity by the chemical
combination of carbon or carbonaceous material, a molten basic
electrolyte continuously impregnated with oxygen or air, a
collecting electrode not chemically acted upon by said
impregnated electrolyte when the circuit is completed, a
containing vessel of iron and means for maintaining the
electrolyte in a molten condition.
9) As a generator of electricity by the chemical
combination of carbon with the oxygen of the air, an
oxidizable electrode of carbon or carbonaceous material, an
electrolyte of molten sodium or potassium hydrate continuously
impregnated with oxygen by a blast of air, a collecting
electrode not chemically acted upon by said impregnated
electrolyte when the circuit is completed, a containing vessel
of iron and means for maintaining the electrolyte in a molten
condition.
William W. Jacques