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HFC-227ea Fire Suppression Agent

HFC-227ea Fire Suppression Agent

Properties, Applications, Limitations & System Design Considerations

HFC-227ea (also known by its chemical name Heptafluoropropane) is a clean gaseous fire suppression agent used in pre-engineered and engineered systems for extinguishing Class A, B, and C fires. It has been widely used for more than two decades as an alternative to Halon 1301. This page provides a factual overview of HFC-227ea, how it works, where it is appropriate, environmental considerations, and design factors engineers must evaluate before selecting this agent.

What Is HFC-227ea?

HFC-227ea is a halocarbon fire suppression agent stored as a liquefied compressed gas.
It discharges as a vapor, suppressing fire without leaving residue or requiring post-discharge cleanup.

 

Chemically:
CF₃CHFCF₃ – Heptafluoropropane


Common names include:

FM-200® (brand name)

HFC-227ea (generic)

 

It is listed in NFPA 2001 and ISO 14520 as an approved clean agent.

How HFC-227ea Extinguishes a Fire

HFC-227ea suppresses fire primarily through heat absorption.
It removes thermal energy from the flame to the point where combustion can no longer be sustained.

 

Mechanisms involved:

• Physical cooling effect (primary mechanism)

• Minor chemical inhibition

• Electrically non-conductive discharge

 

Unlike CO₂, it does not work by oxygen depletion, which is why it is permitted for normally occupied areas at design concentrations.

Environmental Profile of HFC-227ea

HFC-227ea has no ozone depletion potential (ODP = 0).


However, it has a high global warming potential and a long atmospheric lifetime, which has led to international regulatory pressure.

 

Key environmental metrics:

• ODP: 0

• GWP: ~3,220

• Atmospheric lifetime: ~34 years

 

Because of these characteristics:

• Many countries are reducing HFC usage through Kigali Amendment phase-downs.

• Some industries are shifting toward agents like FK-5-1-12 due to its lower global impact.

 

HFC-227ea remains allowed and widely used, but long-term planning should consider the global HFC regulatory landscape.

Advantages of HFC-227ea

• No residue — avoids damage to electronics.

• Electrically safe — can discharge on energized equipment.

• Approved for occupied spaces within NFPA 2001 limits.

• Fast discharge — typically 10 seconds in total flooding systems.

• Long, established track record — widely used since the 1990s.

• Straightforward system integration with detection tubing or solenoid-actuated valves.

Limitations of HFC-227ea

• High global warming potential compared to modern clean agents.

• Regulatory pressure may increase costs or restrict future production.

• Requires proper enclosure integrity to maintain concentration.

 

Not suitable for:

• Very large open rooms

• High-airflow environments

• Outdoor applications

 

At very high concentrations, temporary exposure may cause cardiac sensitization – NFPA 2001 mitigates this by enforcing limits.

 

Compared with FK-5-1-12, HFC-227ea requires more agent mass per cubic foot, which can mean larger cylinders.

Is HFC-227ea a Long-Term Solution?

HFC-227ea remains widely used and fully compliant today.


However, its long-term future is influenced by:

• Global HFC phase-down policies

• Potential increases in manufacturing costs

• End-user preference for lower-GWP agents

 

For many applications, HFC-227ea is still highly effective and appropriate – but engineering teams should remain aware of evolving regulatory trends.

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