Leak Detection
Electronic leak detection calibrated for HFO and HFC/HFO blends, lower sensitivity requirements, nitrogen pressure testing, and A2L-specific detection challenges.
- Select leak detectors calibrated for HFO and HFC/HFO blend refrigerants
- Explain why some existing HFC detectors may not respond to HFO-containing blends
- Perform nitrogen pressure testing with A2L safety precautions
- Describe detection challenges unique to low-GWP refrigerant systems
Lección 1
Detector Selection for Low-GWP Refrigerants
Not All HFC Detectors Work for All Low-GWP Refrigerants
Electronic leak detectors designed for HFC refrigerants (R-410A, R-134a) use sensor technologies calibrated for the fluorine atoms in HFC molecules. Many low-GWP refrigerants are HFOs (hydrofluoroolefins) or HFC/HFO blends, which have different molecular structures. Some older HFC detectors may have reduced sensitivity or no response to HFO molecules.
R-32 (Pure HFC)
Molecular type: HFC - difluoromethane
Detection: Standard HFC detectors work well
Sensitivity: Good with heated diode and infrared
Special detector needed: No
R-454B (HFC/HFO Blend)
Molecular type: R-32 (HFC) + R-1234yf (HFO)
Detection: Some older HFC detectors have reduced response
Sensitivity: Varies by detector model and calibration
Special detector needed: Verify detector is rated for R-454B
R-1234yf / R-1234ze (Pure HFO)
Molecular type: HFO - hydrofluoroolefin
Detection: Many HFC detectors do not respond
Sensitivity: Requires HFO-calibrated or universal detector
Special detector needed: Yes - HFO-specific calibration required
Choosing the Right Detector
When purchasing or using a leak detector for low-GWP refrigerant service, verify:
- The detector specifies the refrigerant by name on its supported-refrigerant list. "HFC compatible" does not guarantee it detects R-454B or R-1234yf.
- Infrared (NDIR) detectors generally have broader refrigerant compatibility than heated diode detectors because they detect the carbon-fluorine bonds common to both HFCs and HFOs.
- The detector has been updated - some manufacturers offer firmware or sensor cartridge updates that add low-GWP refrigerant detection to existing models.
Test Your Detector Before Relying on It
Before using your existing detector on a low-GWP system, test it against a known small leak source of the specific refrigerant. If the detector does not respond or responds weakly, it cannot be trusted for that refrigerant. This is not a calibration issue - the sensor technology may be fundamentally incompatible with the molecule.
A2L-Specific Leak Detectors
Some manufacturers produce A2L safety detectors designed specifically for installation in equipment or mechanical rooms. These detectors:
- Monitor continuously for refrigerant concentration
- Alarm at 25% of the LFL (well before any flammability risk)
- Can trigger ventilation systems or equipment shutdown
- Are required by some building codes in specific A2L installations
These are different from handheld service detectors - they are fixed-installation safety devices.
Verify your electronic leak detector is rated for the specific low-GWP refrigerant by name. Infrared (NDIR) detectors have broader compatibility than heated diode. Older HFC detectors may not respond to HFO-containing refrigerants like R-1234yf or blends containing R-1234yf such as R-454B. Always test your detector against the target refrigerant before relying on it.