The A2L Refrigerant
Revolution Is Here
R-410A is gone from new equipment. R-454B and R-32 are taking over. Here’s everything HVACR engineers, contractors, and facility managers need to know about the A2L transition — the science, the compliance timeline, and what it means for your next installation.
The HVACR industry has undergone regulatory shifts before — the R-22 phaseout, the move to R-410A, the HFC caps — but the current A2L transition is arguably the most technically disruptive change in a generation. Driven by the American Innovation and Manufacturing (AIM) Act and its implementing rules under EPA’s HFC phasedown schedule, the production and import of R-410A for new residential and light commercial HVAC equipment officially ended in 2025.
What has replaced it is a class of refrigerants categorized as A2L — mildly flammable, low global warming potential (GWP), and technically superior in several efficiency metrics. Understanding the physics, handling requirements, and installation changes these fluids demand is now a baseline competency for any HVACR professional.
01 — Refrigerant Classification
Understanding the ASHRAE Safety Classification
ASHRAE Standard 34 classifies refrigerants on a two-axis grid: toxicity (A = lower, B = higher) and flammability (1 = no flame propagation, 2L = lower flammability, 2 = flammable, 3 = highly flammable). R-410A is an A1 — non-toxic, non-flammable. The new generation sits in the A2L bucket: non-toxic, but mildly flammable under specific conditions.
What “Mildly Flammable” Actually Means
A2L refrigerants are characterized by a maximum burning velocity of ≤ 10 cm/s (compare to propane at ~46 cm/s). They require a minimum ignition energy significantly higher than conventional flammable gases. In practice, this means an A2L refrigerant leak will not ignite from a spark or pilot light the way an A3 gas like propane would — but it can ignite under sustained high-energy ignition in confined spaces with the right air-to-refrigerant ratio.
| Refrigerant | ASHRAE Class | GWP (AR5) | Burn Velocity | Primary Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|
R-410A | A1 | 2,088 | Non-flammable | Legacy residential/commercial |
R-454B | A2L | 467 | ≤ 6.7 cm/s | New residential split systems |
R-32 | A2L | 675 | ≤ 6.7 cm/s | Mini-splits, VRF systems |
R-290 | A3 | 3 | ~46 cm/s | Small commercial refrigeration |
R-744 (CO₂) | A1 | 1 | Non-flammable | Transcritical refrigeration |
GWP Comparison (AR5, normalized to R-410A = 100%)
02 — Thermodynamic Properties
Engineering Properties: R-454B vs R-410A
The most widely adopted A2L replacement in North American residential HVAC is R-454B (trade name: Puron Advance™ by Carrier, OpteonXL41 by Chemours). It is a zeotropic blend of R-32 (68.9%) and R-1234yf (31.1%). Understanding its thermodynamic behavior is critical for correct system design.
Key Property Differences
| Property | R-410A | R-454B | Δ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Normal boiling point | −51.5°C | −51.7°C | ≈ same |
| Critical temperature | 72.1°C | 77.3°C | +5.2°C |
| Critical pressure | 4.90 MPa | 4.05 MPa | −17.3% |
| Latent heat @ 0°C | 200 kJ/kg | 212 kJ/kg | +6% |
| Temperature glide | 0.1°C (near-azeotrope) | ~4.5°C (zeotrope) | Significant |
| COP (typical system) | Baseline | +3–5% higher | + |
The Temperature Glide Problem
Unlike R-410A which behaves almost as an azeotrope, R-454B has a notable temperature glide of approximately 4.5°C. This means the bubble point and dew point temperatures differ — the refrigerant does not evaporate or condense at a constant temperature. For engineers, this has real consequences:
- Evaporator and condenser sizing calculations must account for glide
- Refrigerant charging must always be done as a liquid charge from the cylinder to preserve blend composition
- Recovering a zeotropic blend into a system can alter its composition — fractionation becomes a real-world risk if the refrigerant leaks partially from vapor phase
- Superheat and subcooling targets shift; manufacturer specifications must be followed precisely
“The transition to A2Ls is not just a refrigerant swap. It’s a re-engineering of installation practice, tooling, and technician cognition.”
03 — Safety Engineering
A2L Safety: What Changes in the Field
The mild flammability of A2L refrigerants has triggered a cascade of code and standards updates. ASHRAE 15-2022, UL 60335-2-40, and the 2024 editions of the International Mechanical Code (IMC) and International Fire Code (IFC) all contain updated provisions specifically addressing A2L use.
Charge Limits and Occupied Space Rules
Maximum allowable refrigerant charge in an occupied space is governed by the Lower Flammability Limit (LFL) of the refrigerant and the smallest occupied room volume served by the system. For R-454B, the LFL is approximately 307 g/m³. ASHRAE 15 and UL 60335-2-40 define the “room volume factor” that determines the max charge per indoor unit for ductless and VRF systems.
For most residential split systems, actual charges fall well within this limit. For large VRF systems serving multiple zones, engineers must perform a detailed per-zone charge analysis.
Ignition Source Mitigation
The core safety strategy for A2L systems is eliminating ignition sources in refrigerant-rich zones. Manufacturers have redesigned control boards, fan motors, and contactor assemblies to meet IEC 60079-15 “nA” (non-arcing) requirements. Field technicians must:
- Use only A2L-rated tools and recovery equipment (cylinders, manifold gauges, recovery machines)
- Never use open flame brazing near a charged A2L system without full refrigerant recovery first
- Ensure adequate ventilation in the work area (target < 25% LFL concentration before energizing)
- Verify that all electrical connections are tight — arcing in a refrigerant-rich atmosphere is the primary ignition risk
- Follow the manufacturer’s specific leak check procedure — nitrogen pressure testing still applies
04 — Installation & Commissioning
Installation Changes and Best Practices
Copper Tube Sizing
R-454B operates at lower working pressures than R-410A (critical pressure drops from 4.90 MPa to 4.05 MPa). Maximum Allowable Working Pressure (MAWP) ratings on service valves, copper tubing, and fittings designed for R-410A generally remain compatible, but engineers should confirm compatibility with the specific manufacturer’s documentation — especially for larger commercial tonnage.
Refrigerant mass flow rates change slightly due to different fluid density properties, but for most standard residential applications, existing copper line set sizing charts developed for R-410A can be used with minimal adjustment. For long line sets > 50 ft or significant elevation changes, re-verify suction and liquid line sizing using the refrigerant manufacturer’s updated selection software.
Oil Compatibility
R-454B is compatible with POE (Polyolester) oil — the same oil type used in R-410A systems. This is a significant practical advantage. POE oil viscosity grades (ISO 32, ISO 68) remain the same. However, as with any refrigerant service job: do not reuse drained POE oil, minimize exposure to atmosphere (POE is hygroscopic), and follow the compressor manufacturer’s oil charge specifications precisely.
Evacuation and Leak Testing
The evacuation process for A2L systems is identical in procedure to A1 systems. Target < 500 microns (ideally < 300 microns) measured at the refrigerant circuit, not at the vacuum pump. Use an electronic micron gauge positioned at the system, not at the pump inlet. Hold vacuum for a minimum of 15 minutes after pump isolation to verify system integrity.
Charging Procedure
Because R-454B is a zeotropic blend, charging must always be performed as a liquid charge directly from the cylinder. Vapor charging from a zeotropic blend cylinder will fractionate the refrigerant — the lighter component (R-1234yf) will exit the cylinder preferentially, leaving a composition-shifted residue in the cylinder and an off-spec charge in the system.
Use the cylinder dip tube (inverted cylinder or dip-tube-equipped cylinder) to ensure liquid extraction. If charging through the low-side service port on a running system, flash the liquid charge through a flow-control orifice or charge at a rate slow enough to prevent liquid slugging at the compressor.
05 — Tools & Certification
Tooling Requirements and Technician Certification
The EPA Section 608 regulations have been updated to require certified technicians for the purchase and handling of A2L refrigerants in the same manner as HFCs. Recovery machines must be rated for A2L service — look for UL 2990 listed equipment specifically rated for mildly flammable refrigerants.
Required Equipment Upgrades
- UL 2990-listed recovery machine rated for A2L refrigerants
- Recovery cylinders rated for A2L service (DOT specification, proper labeling)
- Digital manifold gauge set compatible with R-454B and R-32 pressure/temperature curves
- Electronic refrigerant leak detector with A2L sensitivity (≤ 3 ppm detection threshold recommended)
- Refrigerant scale accurate to ±0.05 oz for precision liquid charging
- Updated vacuum gauge with digital micron measurement
Training and Certification
ESCO Institute, HVAC Excellence, and North American Technician Excellence (NATE) all offer A2L-specific training modules and certifications. While no new federal certification beyond Section 608 is currently mandated for A2L work, several manufacturers are requiring documented A2L training for warranty eligibility on their new equipment lines.
06 — Looking Ahead
What Comes After A2L?
The A2L transition is the first phase of a longer decarbonization roadmap. The EPA’s HFC phasedown schedule targets an 85% reduction in HFC production and consumption by 2036 (relative to the 2011–2013 baseline). This means even lower-GWP refrigerants will become necessary in certain applications.
In commercial refrigeration, CO₂ transcritical systems (R-744) are rapidly gaining market share, particularly in supermarket and cold chain applications where the GWP of 1 and excellent thermodynamic properties at low ambient temperatures make a compelling case. In large commercial HVAC, R-1234ze(E) and R-513A are positioning as long-term lower-GWP options for centrifugal and screw chillers.
The industry is also watching natural refrigerant adoption — propane (R-290) is already standard in European residential mini-splits and is making inroads in North America for small-capacity equipment where its A3 classification can be safely managed with charge limits under 150 grams.
The engineers who will define the next decade of HVACR are the ones who understand refrigerant physics, not just refrigerant names.
Conclusion
The shift to A2L refrigerants is not an obstacle — it is an engineering opportunity. Systems running R-454B or R-32 are measurably more efficient, carry a dramatically lower climate impact, and in well-designed installations carry manageable safety profiles. But the margin for error in handling, charging, and commissioning is narrower than technicians were accustomed to with the forgiving A1 refrigerants of the previous generation.
For HVACR professionals, the imperative is clear: invest in updated tooling, complete A2L safety training, and read every OEM IOM from cover to cover before the first service call on new equipment. The transition is already here — the companies and technicians who have prepared for it are already winning the work.

