When fire breaks out in a data center, archive room, or control center, water and foam aren’t solutions — they’re second disasters waiting to happen. HazenFire’s Externally Pressurized FM200 system delivers clean, residue-free fire suppression with the engineering flexibility to protect even the largest, most complex facilities.

A Fire Suppression System Built for High-Value, Sensitive Environments

An Externally Pressurized FM200 Fire Suppression System is a clean agent gas fire extinguishing solution engineered for spaces where water, foam, or powder could cause catastrophic secondary damage. It uses FM200 (also known as HFC-227ea) as the extinguishing agent, paired with a separate nitrogen cylinder as the driving gas source.

You may also see this system referred to as:

What sets it apart from a conventional stored-pressure FM200 system is a deceptively simple but powerful design choice: storing the FM200 agent and nitrogen driving gas separately. This structural difference improves agent conveyance performance, increases discharge stability, supports significantly longer piping distances, and delivers greater flexibility for large protected areas or projects where the cylinder room sits far from the area it protects.

For data centers, control rooms, archive rooms, libraries, computer rooms, power distribution rooms, and other mission-critical facilities, HazenFire’s externally pressurized FM200 system delivers a genuinely professional total flooding clean agent fire protection solution.

Understanding FM200 / HFC-227ea

FM200, chemically known as Heptafluoropropane (HFC-227ea), is a clean gaseous fire extinguishing agent that suppresses fire through both physical and chemical mechanisms. It offers strong electrical insulation performance, high fire extinguishing efficiency, and zero ozone depletion potential.

The standout advantage: FM200 leaves no residue after discharge. For protected spaces where post-incident cleanup is difficult or where any contamination is simply unacceptable, this property alone often makes the decision.

Typical Assets Protected by FM200

Because FM200 leaves behind no powder, foam, or water residue, it has become a go-to choice for clean agent fire suppression in high-value and sensitive environments worldwide.

What Actually Makes a System “Externally Pressurized”?

In a traditional stored-pressure FM200 system, the agent and nitrogen share the same cylinder — nitrogen pressurizes the cylinder throughout standby and helps drive discharge when the system activates.

HazenFire’s Externally Pressurized FM200 system takes a fundamentally different approach.

Here, the FM200 agent is stored as a liquid inside the agent cylinder without nitrogen pressurization. The pressure inside that cylinder is simply the agent’s own saturated vapor pressure. The compressed nitrogen that eventually drives discharge lives in its own separate, high-pressure cylinder entirely.

When the system activates, high-pressure nitrogen first passes through a pressure-reducing device, then enters the FM200 agent cylinder — pushing the liquid agent through the siphon tube, container valve, piping network, and nozzles into the protected area.

This separation of roles is why the system carries several alternate names:

The core concept, distilled: FM200 agent and nitrogen driving gas live in separate cylinders. Nitrogen only enters the FM200 cylinder the moment the system is activated — not a second before.

How the System Works: From Detection to Discharge

HazenFire’s externally pressurized FM200 system integrates fire detection, alarm control, distribution and release equipment, agent storage, driving gas storage, piping network, nozzles, and alarm indication devices into one coordinated response chain.

1. Fire detectors sense smoke, heat, or flame → alarm sent to control panel
2. Control panel confirms fire signal → activates audible/visual alarms
  sends linkage signals to stop ventilation, close dampers, shut down systems
3. After preset delay time → control panel sends release signal to actuation device

4. Pilot gas cylinder opens selector valve and driving gas cylinder valve
5. Nitrogen driving gas releases and passes through pressure-reducing device
6. Regulated nitrogen enters FM200 agent cylinder → pushes agent through piping
7. FM200 discharges through nozzles into protected area
   → reaches designed extinguishing concentration

This is a total flooding suppression design — the agent fills the entire protected enclosure to suppress fire quickly and uniformly, leaving no gaps in coverage.

Why Separate Storage Actually Matters

The separated storage architecture isn’t a cosmetic design choice — it solves two genuine engineering problems.

Problem 1: Gas dissolution during standby. When FM200 and nitrogen share a cylinder, the agent remains in contact with pressurizing nitrogen continuously. In HazenFire’s externally pressurized design, the agent never contacts nitrogen during normal storage, eliminating this dissolution risk entirely.

Problem 2: Vapor separation during discharge. After activation, maintaining agent conveyance pressure above storage pressure helps prevent vapor separation and reduces the two-phase flow phenomenon that can destabilize discharge in conventional systems.

The practical result: nitrogen stays behind the liquid FM200 agent, continuously pushing it forward through the piping network with a faster, more stable flow than a stored-pressure system can typically achieve. This directly improves the piping network’s agent conveyance capability — making the system far better suited to long-distance discharge applications.

Externally Pressurized vs. Stored-Pressure FM200: A Direct Comparison

Both systems use the same FM200 / HFC-227ea agent. The difference lies entirely in storage and discharge architecture.

FeatureStored-Pressure FM200HazenFire Externally Pressurized FM200
Storage configurationAgent + nitrogen in same cylinderAgent and nitrogen stored separately
Standby cylinder pressurePressurized continuouslyAgent cylinder unpressurized (vapor pressure only)
Nitrogen contact with agentContinuousOnly during discharge
Agent flow stabilityStandardEnhanced — more stable, less pressure fluctuation
Piping distance capabilityStandardLong-distance capable (up to 200 m)
Best suited forStandard rooms, normal piping runsLarge volumes, long piping, centralized cylinder rooms
System complexitySimpler structureMore advanced engineering design

For small, standard protected rooms, a stored-pressure FM200 system may well be sufficient. But for large-scale projects, long piping routes, or centralized cylinder room designs, HazenFire’s externally pressurized FM200 system delivers measurably better engineering flexibility.

Six Key Advantages of HazenFire’s External Storage FM200 System

1. Longer Agent Conveyance Distance

Under suitable design conditions, maximum conveyance distance can reach up to 200 meters — a critical advantage when the cylinder room can’t be positioned close to the protected area. This proves especially valuable for large data centers, industrial control rooms, underground equipment rooms, large power distribution facilities, and centralized cylinder room projects serving multiple protected zones.

2. More Stable Discharge Performance

Because nitrogen enters the agent cylinder only at the moment of discharge, the system maintains more consistent driving pressure throughout. The pressure-reducing device regulates nitrogen pressure precisely before it reaches the FM200 cylinder, stabilizing agent flow rate, nozzle inlet pressure, agent atomization, discharge uniformity, and ultimately, fire extinguishing efficiency.

3. Better Nozzle Atomization

By adjusting driving pressure and nitrogen configuration, the externally pressurized design increases nozzle inlet pressure — directly improving FM200 atomization. For total flooding suppression, where the entire protected space must reach required extinguishing concentration uniformly, superior atomization translates directly into better real-world performance.

4. Higher Cylinder Utilization

Since the agent cylinder stores FM200 without nitrogen pressurization during standby, filling density can reach up to 1249 kg/m³ — substantially higher than conventional arrangements. This means fewer cylinders, more efficient use of cylinder room space, and meaningful cost savings on space-constrained projects.

5. Potential for Smaller Piping Diameter

Strong, stable driving pressure allows more agent to be conveyed efficiently through the piping network, which can — under suitable design conditions — permit relatively smaller piping diameter compared to conventional arrangements. The result: reduced piping cost and greater project flexibility.

6. Ideal for Halon 1301 Replacement Projects

For facilities still running legacy Halon 1301 systems, HazenFire’s externally pressurized FM200 system offers a credible retrofit path. In many projects, existing cylinder rooms and piping networks can be reused following proper engineering evaluation — significantly reducing reconstruction work and overall project cost.

Where This System Belongs

HazenFire’s externally pressurized HFC-227ea fire suppression system is built for protected areas demanding fast fire suppression with zero tolerance for residue.

Typical Applications

It’s especially well-suited to spaces holding valuable assets, critical records, electronic equipment, or essential hardware and software systems.

What Fires Can FM200 Actually Suppress?

FM200 fire suppression is effective against:

Important limitation: FM200 is not suitable for fires involving oxidizing chemicals, reactive metals, metal hydrides, or self-decomposing chemicals such as hydrogen peroxide or hydrazine.

This is precisely why proper system design and a thorough fire risk evaluation must precede any FM200 system selection — clean agent suppression is powerful, but it isn’t universal.

Technical Specifications

SpecificationDetail
Extinguishing agentFM200 / HFC-227ea
Extinguishing methodTotal flooding
Rated working pressure at 20°C4.2 MPa
Agent discharge time≤ 10 seconds
Agent cylinder volume90 L, 120 L, 150 L, 180 L
Maximum filling density≤ 1250 kg/m³
Driving gasNitrogen
Driving gas cylinder volume70 L
Driving gas storage pressure12 MPa
Pilot cylinder volume5 L
Pilot cylinder storage pressure6 MPa
Main power supplyAC 220 V, 50 Hz
Backup power supplyDC 24 V
Solenoid actuation voltageDC 24 V
Automatic delay time0–30 seconds, adjustable

The system supports automatic control, electrical manual control, and mechanical emergency manual control — giving operators multiple layers of activation reliability.

When Should You Choose an Externally Pressurized FM200 System?

This system architecture earns its place when:

Engineering Flexibility for Complex Fire Protection Challenges

An externally pressurized FM200 fire suppression system isn’t simply another clean agent option on the shelf — it’s a purpose-engineered solution for projects demanding stronger agent conveyance capability and genuine design flexibility.

For engineering contractors, system integrators, and project owners navigating complex clean agent fire protection requirements, HazenFire’s external storage FM200 system delivers the performance, stability, and flexibility that conventional stored-pressure systems simply weren’t designed to provide.

Clean suppression. Stable discharge. Engineered for the projects where it matters most.

HazenFire — Clean Agent Fire Suppression. Engineered for Critical Infrastructure.

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