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Módulo 5 de 10 210m 10 exam Qs

Refrigerants & Environmental Regulations

Refrigerant types, ODP, GWP, azeotropic and zeotropic blends, temperature glide, and charging methods.

  • Classify refrigerants by type - CFC, HCFC, HFC, and natural
  • Explain ODP and GWP values and their regulatory significance
  • Compare azeotropic and zeotropic blends including temperature glide
  • Describe proper charging methods for different refrigerant types

Lección 1

CFC, HCFC, HFC & Natural Refrigerants

Refrigerant Classification

Refrigerants are classified by their chemical composition and environmental impact. The Red Seal exam expects you to know which refrigerants fall into each category and their regulatory status in Canada.

CFC (Chlorofluorocarbons)

Examples: R-11, R-12, R-502

ODP: High (contains chlorine)

Status: Production banned since 1996

Numbering: 400/500 series blends

HCFC (Hydrochlorofluorocarbons)

Examples: R-22, R-123, R-141b

ODP: Low (reduced chlorine)

Status: Production banned since 2020

Note: Transitional refrigerants

HFC (Hydrofluorocarbons)

Examples: R-134a, R-404A, R-410A

ODP: Zero (no chlorine)

Status: Currently in use, GWP regulated

Note: Phase-down under Kigali Amendment

Natural Refrigerants

Natural refrigerants are substances that occur in nature. They have zero ODP and very low GWP. The most common natural refrigerants are:

  • R-717 (Ammonia) - Used in industrial refrigeration, highly efficient but toxic and flammable
  • R-744 (CO2) - Used in transcritical systems and cascade systems, very high operating pressures
  • R-290 (Propane) - Used in small commercial units, flammable (A3 safety classification)
  • R-600a (Isobutane) - Used in domestic refrigerators, flammable
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Safety Classification

Ammonia (R-717) is classified as B2L - toxic and mildly flammable. Propane (R-290) is A3 - non-toxic but highly flammable. The exam tests safety classifications and their implications for system design.

Key Takeaway

CFCs (R-12) are banned and have high ODP. HCFCs (R-22) are banned and have low ODP. HFCs (R-134a, R-410A) have zero ODP but high GWP. Natural refrigerants (ammonia, CO2, propane) have zero ODP and very low GWP.