Some of the planets listed in these Star Trek sources are much larger than Jupiter: I 0.14 - 10 Gm, S 10 - 50 Gm, T 50 - 120 Gm (Gm = gigameter = 10^6 km). However, there is good reason to suspect that such large planets cannot exist. They would be unable to support themselves against their gravity, and they would collapse to smaller sizes. If the Sun did not have its heat, it would collapse to a white-dwarf state with a radius close to the Earth's.
For instance, Seager2007.pdf by Sara Seager and others. It's very technical, but it has a nice graph of some calculated sizes on PDF page 6, Figure 4.
From the calculations, the largest Jovian-composition cold planet has a mass of about 1000 Earth masses and a radius of about 75,000 km (11.8 Earth radii), a bit more than Jupiter's. More mass, and it is smaller. The largest Earthlike-composition planet has a radius of about 15,000 km (2.35 Earth radii), and the largest all-water planet a radius of about 25,000 km (4 Earth radii). Both such planets also have a mass of about 1000 Earth masses.
For instance, Seager2007.pdf by Sara Seager and others. It's very technical, but it has a nice graph of some calculated sizes on PDF page 6, Figure 4.
From the calculations, the largest Jovian-composition cold planet has a mass of about 1000 Earth masses and a radius of about 75,000 km (11.8 Earth radii), a bit more than Jupiter's. More mass, and it is smaller. The largest Earthlike-composition planet has a radius of about 15,000 km (2.35 Earth radii), and the largest all-water planet a radius of about 25,000 km (4 Earth radii). Both such planets also have a mass of about 1000 Earth masses.