In the last post I talked about what it really means for a refrigerant to be classified as an A2L refrigerant. One practical ramification in the United States in 2019 is that an A2L refrigerant cannot be used in a direct expansion system in most buildings in the United States. Most building codes refer to ASHRAE Standard 34 Designation and Classification of Refrigerants and Standard 15 Safety Standard for Refrigeration Systems. Until the most recent revision in 2019, Standard 15 forbid the use of flammable refrigerant in what it describes as “direct systems.” And until the most recent revision in 2019, Standard 15 made no distinction between levels of flammability. Flammable is flammable. Because nearly all mechanical, building, and fire safety codes use ASHRAE as their refrigerant safety reference, no codes presently allow A2L refrigerants in direct systems. A direct system is one in which the building air is directly exposed to the refrigeration components, as in a normal direct expansion evaporator coil. However, now that ASHRAE has revised Standard 15, look for states and code agencies to begin adopting the revised standard. Washington state has already done that. Beginning July 1, 2020 direct expansion A2L systems will be allowed in Washington State subject to the stipulations of the revised 2019 Standard 15. There will be industry pressure for adoption of the new standards. Major refrigerant manufacturers such as Honeywell and Chemours have invested heavily in developing lower GWP refrigerants, many of which are rated A2L. Equipment manufacturers have invested heavily in designing equipment that uses R32, a lower GWP A2L refrigerant. If you would like to read more details of the revised 2019 Standards 15 and 34, ASHRAE here is a link where you can view them on-line https://www.ashrae.org/technical-resources/standards-and-guidelines/read-only-versions-of-ashrae-standards

Of course, ASHRAE will also sell you a downloadable pdf which is really better for extenedreading and studying.