Pressure-Temperature Charts

Saturation P-T data for common refrigerants

R-454B

Zeotropic
GWP: 466
ODP: 0
Safety Class: A2L
Temperature Glide: 1.3°C

Low GWP alternative to R-410A. Also known as Opteon XL41. Mildly flammable (A2L), requires proper handling and equipment rated for A2L refrigerants.

A2L Mildly Flammable - Use equipment rated for A2L refrigerants. Follow local safety codes.

Quick P-T Lookup

kgf/cm²

* Results are interpolated from the P-T table data

Z

Zeotropic Blend

This refrigerant has a temperature glide of 1.3°C - use the correct saturation point!

Temperature Glide Visualization

Dew Point
100% Vapor
For Superheat
1.3°C Glide
Higher Temp Lower Temp
Bubble Point
100% Liquid
For Subcooling

DEW Suction Side / Superheat

  • Superheat = Suction Temp - Dew Point Temp
  • • Use at evaporator outlet
  • • Low pressure gauge reading
  • • Temperature where last liquid evaporates

BUBBLE Liquid Side / Subcooling

  • Subcooling = Bubble Point Temp - Liquid Temp
  • • Use at condenser outlet
  • • High pressure gauge reading
  • • Temperature where first bubble forms

Important: Using the wrong saturation point will give incorrect superheat/subcooling readings. For R-454B with 1.3°C glide, this error can significantly affect diagnosis and charging.

Dew Point (Vapor)

Used for suction line / evaporator

°C °F kgf/cm²
-50 -58 0.7
-45 -49 1.0
-40 -40 1.4
-35 -31 1.8
-30 -22 2.3
-25 -13 2.9
-20 -4 3.6
-15 5 4.3
-10 14 5.2
-5 23 6.1
0 32 7.2
5 41 8.4
10 50 9.7
15 59 11.1
20 68 12.7
25 77 14.4
30 86 16.3
35 95 18.4
40 104 20.6
45 113 23.0
50 122 25.6
55 131 28.4
60 140 31.5
65 149 34.7
70 158 38.2

Bubble Point (Liquid)

Used for liquid line / condenser

°C °F kgf/cm²
-50 -58 0.6
-45 -49 0.9
-40 -40 1.3
-35 -31 1.7
-30 -22 2.2
-25 -13 2.7
-20 -4 3.4
-15 5 4.1
-10 14 5.0
-5 23 5.9
0 32 6.9
5 41 8.1
10 50 9.3
15 59 10.7
20 68 12.3
25 77 13.9
30 86 15.8
35 95 17.8
40 104 20.0
45 113 22.3
50 122 24.8
55 131 27.6
60 140 30.5
65 149 33.7
70 158 37.0

Pressure Units: psig = Gauge pressure (relative to atmosphere) kPa / bar / kgf/cm² = Absolute pressure