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AHRI publishes first A2L report

USA: The AHRI’s Technology Institute has issued its first report from its ongoing $5.2m flammable refrigerant test programme.

The test programme is part of a $5.2 million commitment on the part of AHRI, ASHRAE, US Department of Energy, and the California Air Resources Board to further test in real-world settings low-GWP, “mildly flammable” A2L or flammable refrigerants.

“The ongoing global effort to phase down the use of high-GWP potential refrigerants requires this vital research, which will help us update relevant codes and standards so that appropriate, climate-friendly alternatives can be safely used in air conditioning and refrigeration equipment,” said Karim Amrane, AHRI’s senior vice president, regulatory & research.

The report, Benchmarking Risk by Whole Room Scale Leaks and Ignitions Testing of A2L Refrigerants, was developed following testing at UL, which began in June last year. The objective was to conduct refrigerant leak and ignition testing under real-world conditions to develop data and insight into the risk associated with the use of A2L refrigerants.

Room scale tests were performed for commercial and residential scenarios, including a packaged terminal air conditioner in a motel room, a rooftop unit in a commercial kitchen, a walk-in cooler, a reach-in refrigerator in a convenience store, a split HVAC unit in a utility closet and with servicing error, and a split HVAC unit with hermetic electrical pass-through terminal failure.

“The testing was designed to create relatively low-probability events to evaluate if the ignition spread or had the potential to spread if ignition took place,” said Amrane. “This means that more refrigerant was leaked into the space during these tests than what is proposed by the standard. In other words, a worst case scenario.”

Further testing is planned.

A copy of the report is available here.

Related stories:

AHRI grant for flammability study7 November 2015
USA: The AHRI has awarded a $150,000 grant to the University of Maryland to support the AHRI’s research on refrigerant flammability. Read more…

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