Class 1 refrigerants are either non-combustible or, at 70 degrees F and 14.6 psi (room temperature and sea-level atmospheric pressure), do not support the spread of a flame in a combustible environment of the gas outward from the point of ignition. Refrigerants in this class are considered the safest. Class 2 refrigerants have a lower flammability limit of more than 0.00624 lb./cubic foot (0.10kg/cubic meter) at 70 degrees F and 14.6 psi, and a heat of combustion less than 19 kilojoules/kilogram. Class 3 refrigerants are highly flammable with a lower flammability limit of less than or equal to 0.00624 lb./cubic foot (0.10 kg/cubic meter) at 14.6 psi and 70 degrees F, or a heat of combustion greater than or equal to 19 kilojoules/kilogram.
Examples of class 1 refrigerants are helium (He), neon (Ne), nitrogen (N), water, air, carbon dioxide (CO2), sulfur dioxide (SO2), carbon tetrachloride (CCl4), trichloromonofluoromethane (CCL3F) and carbon tetrafluroide (CF4).
Examples of class 2 refrigerants are ammonia (NH3), ethane (C2H6), propane (C3H8), iso-butane (iC4H10), Methyl chloride (CH3CL), acetic acid (CH3COOH) and dichloromethane (CH2CL2).
Class 3 refrigerants are hydrogen (H2), methane (CH4), butane (C4H10), trifluromethane (CHF3), pentafluroethane (C2HF5), chlorodifluromethane (CHClF2), tetrafluroethane (CF3CH2F) and difluroethane (CHF2CH3).