VRF Refrigerant Pipe Sizing: Suction, Discharge, and Liquid Line Rules

VRF refrigerant piping is one of the few MEP disciplines where the OEM (Daikin, Mitsubishi Electric, Mitsubishi Heavy, Hitachi, LG, Toshiba) effectively dictates the design. Brand-specific tables drive line sizing, refnet selection, and refrigerant charge calculation. But the underlying physics — pressure drop limits, oil return velocity, and refrigerant velocity ranges — are common across brands. Knowing the physics lets you challenge OEM picks, optimize routing, and avoid 6-month commissioning failures.

Three lines, three jobs

A VRF system has three refrigerant lines:

1. Suction line (low pressure, high temperature) — gas returning to the compressor from indoor units. Carries oil; needs minimum velocity to ensure oil return.

2. Discharge line (high pressure, high temperature, gas) — present in heat-recovery (3-pipe) systems only. Connects to the BS (branch selector) box.

3. Liquid line (high pressure, low temperature, liquid) — refrigerant from outdoor unit to indoor unit. Smaller diameter, limited by pressure drop and flash gas formation.

For 2-pipe heat-pump VRF, only suction + liquid. For 3-pipe heat-recovery VRF, all three.

The pressure-drop budget

VRF design budget for total piping pressure drop (compressor discharge to compressor suction):

  • Suction line: typical ΔT_sat ≤ 2 °C (≈ ΔP ≤ 90 kPa for R410A at 5 °C saturated)
  • Liquid line: ΔP ≤ 30 kPa to prevent flash gas
  • Discharge line: ΔT_sat ≤ 2 °C

Exceeding these compromises capacity — typical 3-5 % capacity loss per 1 °C ΔT_sat in suction line.

Velocity bounds

Line Minimum velocity (m/s) Maximum velocity (m/s)
Suction (vertical riser, oil return) 5 20
Suction (horizontal) 4 20
Liquid 0.5 3
Discharge (vertical) 6 20

The minimum on suction is critical — below it, oil settles in the line and starves the compressor. This is why oversized lines (sometimes specified to “future-proof”) cause more compressor failures than undersized lines.

OEM-specific sizing approach

Each brand publishes a sizing chart that combines cooling capacity (kW) with line length to recommend a pipe diameter. Examples:

Daikin VRV (R32 / R410A):

  • 28 kW total connected capacity, 50 m equivalent length: suction 7/8″ (22.2 mm), liquid 3/8″ (9.52 mm)
  • 56 kW, 100 m: suction 1-1/8″ (28.6 mm), liquid 1/2″ (12.7 mm)
  • 112 kW, 150 m: suction 1-3/8″ (34.9 mm), liquid 5/8″ (15.88 mm)

Mitsubishi Electric City Multi:

  • Similar table; minor differences in liquid line (Mitsubishi tends slightly larger on liquid for flash-gas margin)

Mitsubishi Heavy / Hitachi / Toshiba / LG:

  • Each has its own chart. Always pull from the latest OEM design manual; don’t generalize.

Branch selector / refnet sizing

For heat-pump systems: refnet at every branch from main to indoor.

For heat-recovery: BS box at every change-of-direction.

Refnet sizing depends on downstream connected capacity (not upstream). Standard practice: pick the refnet rated for the sum of indoor unit capacities downstream of that branch.

For multi-floor projects, place refnets at floor-supply tee, not at every individual indoor unit. This minimizes the number of brazed joints + reduces leak risk.

Refrigerant charge calculation

Total refrigerant in the system = OEM factory charge + additional charge per metre of liquid line.

Typical R410A additional charge:

  • 9.52 mm (3/8″) liquid: 0.054 kg/m
  • 12.7 mm (1/2″) liquid: 0.110 kg/m
  • 15.88 mm (5/8″) liquid: 0.180 kg/m
  • 19.05 mm (3/4″) liquid: 0.270 kg/m

For a 100 m liquid run at 12.7 mm: additional charge = 11.0 kg.

ASHRAE 15 requires that total refrigerant charge in any occupied space not exceed the Refrigerant Concentration Limit (RCL):

  • R410A: RCL = 0.42 kg/m³ (occupied space volume)
  • R32: RCL = 0.30 kg/m³

For a 50 m³ small office served by VRF, max R410A charge = 21 kg in that room. If the system charge is 28 kg, you must:

  • Provide refrigerant leak detection + auto-shutoff
  • OR redesign to lower charge (smaller capacity OD or split into two systems)
  • OR add ventilation per ASHRAE 15 §7.6

R32 vs R410A — design implications

R32 (HFC-32) is the lower-GWP refrigerant transitioning Indian markets 2022-2026. Design implications:

  • 70 % of R410A pressure ratings — lines slightly thinner OK
  • Higher COP at design (typical 6-12 % improvement on Indian climate)
  • A2L flammability class — ASHRAE 15 charge limits stricter (RCL 0.30 vs 0.42)
  • Brazing + leak testing protocols updated (no smoking, no open flame in detection zone)

Most Indian VRF projects 2024+ are R32 by default. R410A still on legacy retrofits.

From the Field — Engineer’s Notebook

A 2022 12-floor IT campus in Pune was tendered with VRF specified by OEM with default (per-OEM-table) line sizing. The actual installed liquid line on a 280 m run from L1 (outdoor) to L12 (top floor) was 12.7 mm — within OEM table. Commissioning showed 14 % capacity loss on the L11-L12 indoor units. Root cause: liquid line ΔP = 42 kPa (above 30 kPa target) → flash gas at the high-elevation units → reduced enthalpy delivered to evaporator. Solution: re-pipe last 80 m vertical at 15.88 mm, and add a sub-cooler at L8. Final commissioning: 4 % capacity loss, within tolerance. Lesson: long vertical runs need pressure-drop check beyond OEM tables. OEM tables assume horizontal-equivalent length; verticals add ΔP from static head.

5 common mistakes

1. Trusting OEM chart on long runs without ΔP verification. Charts are for typical layouts; verify for runs > 100 m or vertical > 40 m.

2. Oversizing suction line “for future”. Causes oil return failure → compressor wear within 18 months.

3. No refrigerant leak detection in occupied small rooms. ASHRAE 15 charge limits violated → safety + insurance issue.

4. Mixing brand line sets across system. Voids OEM warranty + invalidates capacity rating.

5. Brazing without nitrogen purge. Internal scale formation → expansion valve clog within 6-12 months.

Designer’s checklist

  • [ ] Total connected capacity computed per outdoor unit
  • [ ] Equivalent length calculated (real length + fitting equivalents)
  • [ ] Pipe sizes per OEM chart
  • [ ] ΔP verified on long runs (>100 m) + tall verticals (>40 m)
  • [ ] Velocity check: suction ≥ 5 m/s vertical, ≥ 4 m/s horizontal; liquid ≤ 3 m/s
  • [ ] Refnet placement at floor-tee, not per-indoor-unit
  • [ ] Total refrigerant charge ≤ ASHRAE 15 RCL × occupied volume
  • [ ] Leak detection + auto-shutoff if charge > RCL
  • [ ] Brazing protocol: nitrogen purge + OEM-spec brazing rod + flush
  • [ ] Pressure test: 30 bar / 24 hours nitrogen + held; vacuum to 500 microns + held
  • [ ] Refrigerant + oil records logged on commissioning datasheet

Pairs with: Cooling Load Methods Compared

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