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Disclaimer: This is an update to a question here. I hit the character limit, but still wanted to redo some calculations as I spotted mistakes which were too late to edit in place.
Scaling
It was a surprise for me to learn that MMRTG operates not on pure plutonium, but on its oxide. Unsurprisingly, oxide has a different density from pure metal. This affects the power-to-volume scaling constant. Data on plutonium oxide is taken from here.
Moreover, the actual boiling point of polonium is $962 °C$, which is lower than the boiling point of lithium. To enable lithium as a coolant, one must substitute pure polonium with thulium polonide, $\text{PoTm}$, which has melting point of $2200 °C$. No salting is needed, which is likely not that trivial anyway. With so much heat power polonium could be replaced by its compound with no problems.
This affects the scale factor and in order to compute it I need a density of $\text{PoTm}$, which is, apparently, an unobtainable value. I will estimate it by polonium density as thulium and polonium have surprisingly similar values. The thermal power should be less and, the precise output is nowhere to be found. I will approximate it by molar mass ratio.
There is a better cooling material than pure lithium and while we are at it, let's consider a bit more nuanced approach for energy loss calculation.
First, let's do water and lithium again.
Lithium
Reactive metal that is easily melted and needs to be sheltered from water and the atmosphere.
There are different stages the mole of lithium goes through before escaping into the environment and each step eats a bit of energy, not only evaporation.
Almost ten times worse than lithium, but the temperature of the cold sink is lower and that permits higher maximum efficiency and compactness. This temperature could support pure polonium instead of thulium polonide.
Lithium hydride
This is a lithium compound, $\text{LiH}$, that decomposes into lithium and hydrogen near 1000°C.
Here is a black-and-white image of it for reference.
The key factor here is that it has greater density than lithium and significant formation energy.
There are many important energy values to consider. Enthalpy of fusion for $\text{LiH}$ is found on pubchem, the rest are on the respected wiki pages for hydrogen, lithium and lithium hydrate.
Assuming material science progress it is not a long stretch to establish that whatever the operating temperature, it is possible to isolate the wearer and armour itself from the heat. This will not solve the meltdown problem, but will permit to use high temperature coolants.
For better or worse, any RTG is still a heat engine.
For pure polonium RTGs, the operating temperature, $950°C$, is around the boiling point of the fuel, $962 °C$. For the polonide RTGs the temperature is not bound by fuel boiling, but rather by the limits of structural materials.
The melting point of copper is $1084.62 °C$, which is not very high, aluminum is even lower, while platinum melts only at $1768.3 °C$. So, let's assume that it is possible to preserve wiring and structure with advanced material science all the way to $2000 °C$.
Let's compute the maximum power source effectiveness for different configurations of coolant and fuel. Maximum effectiveness is $\eta^{\text{max}}(T_c, T_h) = 1 - \frac{T_c}{T_h}$, where temperatures are in kelvins.
Interestingly enough, effectiveness should drop after the $\text{LiH}$ coolant exhausts all hydrogen and switches to pure $\text{Li}$.
However, these are theoretical maximums for effectiveness, assembled devices could be drastically less efficient. For example MMRTG and GPHS-RTG have efficiency of only $6.3\%$, while their theoretical maximum are $\eta(210°C, 538°C) = 40.44\%$ and $\eta(300°C, 1000°C) = 54.98\%$ respectfully.
Power armour configurations
Let's compute coolant consumption for different armour setups.
$$
W_{exo} = 5kW
$$
Water
Baseline effectiveness is lithium, I arbitrarily chose it as $10\%$, because $6\%$ is just too low. Water-polonide effectiveness is scaled by maximum values from the baseline.
It's still too much even with effectiveness scaling.
Lithium hydride
Baseline effectiveness.
$$
\eta_\text{Li} = 10\%
$$
But that is only for pure lithium, which is only a part of the cooling by $\text{LiH}$. The first boiling stage is going to be more effective. Let's scale it by maximum efficiency proportionally to released energy.
This means that there would be around $50 \text{ ml}$ of fuel that is spread thinly, like butter, between the inner side of the outmost thermal isolation and the outermost side, the hot shoe, of the thermoelectric element. Then there would be a body of lithium that would be wrapped by the other side of thermoelectric elements, providing a cold shoe. Lithium would be most of the mass and volume of the power source.
The whole setup is just a 100L barrel of lithium wrapped in a thermoelectric element, a thin layer of polonium, and outer isolation. Here is such a barrel with humans for scale.
Conclusion
Math kinda checks out and, modulo daily coolant refills, the design seems to work. The bottom line is that it is an obligation for power armour user to carry a huge backpack and be bulky.
If you are still want to read more, here is an attempt to do the math for an adjustable power source
The first art is by progv, the second is by flyingdebris, the source for the third, the most optimistic one, is not clear.
I would even say that this shifts the whole design into mech suit territory, but the level of power is not quit there yet. Even with a very optimistic estimation($5 \frac{W}{kg}$ for running) the whole thing should weight a ton at most.
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Update to a question on worldbuilding stackexchange