Copper-chromium-zirconium (CuCrZr) is a commercially available, precipitationstrengthened alloy. The combination of its good thermal conductivity and mechanical strength at low and moderate temperatures made it of interest for use as heat sink material in high heat flux components in actual and future fusion facilities. Its drawback is the microstructural modification and thereby particularly the loss of mechanical strength at temperatures above 500 °C. This limits allowable operational temperatures and also limits the temperature range in which cyclic and reproducible measurements of thermophysical properties can be performed. These difficulties and the international significance of the material makes it an excellent study object for an interlaboratory test of several independent European thermophysical laboratories in which the quality and comparability of thermophysical measurements were determined. The main outcome of this study is that the different laboratory data are in good agreement providing maximum deviations of ~ 5 % for dilatometry, ~ 2 % for DSC measurements and up to 10 % for thermal diffusivity measurements. In addition to the determined high reproducibility within the particular thermo-physical laboratories, it was found that the average thermal conductivity of CuCrZr produced in a certain compositional range is identical and within a small scatter band.
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