tech or flex armor is used in residential areas with possible rodent issues as well but limited to dry areas only.
raceway primarily in industrial, trunking in centralized power control panels from floor to floor. and tray mostly for communication cabling.
depending on the branch they work the most (residential, commercial, or industrial) many of the sparks are basically limited to a set type of conduit or cabling. residential usually nmc (romex) or mc (armored cables) some pvc conduit with very little exposure to rigid or emt.
heavy commercial usually emt and coated or anodized rigid, and industrial usually rigid, raceways, trays, and trunking
office building for instance require stringent fire proofing and fire blocking materials for every wall or floor penetration and depending on some inspectors it could cost you your license for failure to comply.
i would say the major difference between a residential spark and an industrial one here is whether they are complying with de-rating rules.
not knowing what a customer is going to load the circuits with they are limited to the materials they have to use and generally overkill the size to prevent possible problems (and its still a crap shoot because you don't know if the home owner is going to put in larger over current devices after you have left)
its one reason that i always took photos and made a detailed list of components of every panel I installed and had the inspector sign it as witness.