What is a Clean room?
1. Cleanroom Overview
2. Cleanroom Air Flow Principles
3. Cleanroom Classifications
4. ISO 14644-1 Cleanroom
Standards
5. BS 5295 Cleanroom
Standards
A.Custom Designed Clean room B.Clean room With Custom Door Option
C.Custom Control Panel C.Blower For Clean room
For Clean room Manufacture
Cleanroom OverviewTypically
used in manufacturing or scientific research, a cleanroom is a controlled
environment that has a low level of pollutants such as dust, airborne microbes,
aerosol particles, and chemical vapors. To be exact, a cleanroom has a
controlled level of contamination that is specified by the number of particles
per cubic meter at a specified particle size. The ambient air outside in a
typical city environment contains 35,000,000 particles per cubic meter, 0.5 mm
and larger in diameter, corresponding to an ISO 9 cleanroom which is at the
lowest level of cleanroom standards.
Cleanrooms
are used in practically every industry where small particles can adversely
affect the manufacturing process. They vary in size and complexity, and are
used extensively in industries such as semiconductor manufacturing,
pharmaceuticals, biotech, medical device and life sciences, as well as critical
process manufacturing common in aerospace, optics, military and Department of
Energy.
A
cleanroom is any given contained space where provisions are made to reduce
particulate contamination and control other environmental parameters such as
temperature, humidity and pressure. The key component is the High Efficiency
Particulate Air (HEPA) filter that is used to trap particles that are 0.3
micron and larger in size. All of the air delivered to a cleanroom passes
through HEPA filters, and in some cases where stringent cleanliness performance
is necessary, Ultra Low Particulate Air (ULPA) filters are used.
Personnel
selected to work in cleanrooms undergo extensive training in contamination
control theory. They enter and exit the cleanroom through airlocks, air showers
and/or gowning rooms, and they must wear special clothing designed to trap
contaminants that are naturally generated by skin and the body.
Depending
on the room classification or function, personnel gowning may be as limited as
lab coats and hairnets, or as extensive as fully enveloped in multiple layered
bunny suits with self contained breathing apparatus.
Cleanroom
clothing is used to prevent substances from being released off the wearer’s
body and contaminating the environment. The cleanroom clothing itself must not
release particles or fibers to prevent contamination of the environment by
personnel. This type of personnel contamination can degrade product performance
in the semiconductor and pharmaceutical industries and it can cause
cross-infection between medical staff and patients in the healthcare industry
for example.
Cleanroom
garments include boots, shoes, aprons, beard covers, bouffant caps, coveralls,
face masks, frocks/lab coats, gowns, glove and finger cots, hairnets, hoods,
sleeves and shoe covers. The type of cleanroom garments used should reflect the
cleanroom and product specifications. Low-level cleanrooms may only require
special shoes having completely smooth soles that do not track in dust or dirt.
However, shoe bottoms must not create slipping hazards since safety always
takes precedence. A cleanroom suit is usually required for entering a
cleanroom. Class 10,000 cleanrooms may use simple smocks, head covers, and
booties. For Class 10 cleanrooms, careful gown wearing procedures with a zipped
cover all, boots, gloves and complete respirator enclosure are required.
Cleanrooms
maintain particulate-free air through the use of either HEPA or ULPA filters
employing laminar or turbulent air flow principles. Laminar, or unidirectional,
air flow systems direct filtered air downward in a constant stream. Laminar air
flow systems are typically employed across 100% of the ceiling to maintain
constant, unidirectional flow. Laminar flow criteria is generally stated in
portable work stations (LF hoods), and is mandated in ISO-1 through ISO-4
classified cleanrooms.
Proper
cleanroom design encompasses the entire air distribution system, including
provisions for adequate, downstream air returns. In vertical flow rooms, this
means the use of low wall air returns around the perimeter of the zone. In
horizontal flow applications, it requires the use of air returns at the
downstream boundary of the process. The use of ceiling mounted air returns is
contradictory to proper cleanroom system design.
Cleanrooms
are classified by how clean the air is. In Federal Standard 209 (A to D) of the
USA, the number of particles equal to and greater than 0.5mm is measured in one
cubic foot of air, and this count is used to classify the cleanroom. This
metric nomenclature is also accepted in the most recent 209E version of the
Standard. Federal Standard 209E is used domestically. The newer standard is TC
209 from the International Standards Organization. Both standards classify a
cleanroom by the number of particles found in the laboratory's air. The
cleanroom classification standards FS 209E and ISO 14644-1 require specific
particle count measurements and calculations to classify the cleanliness level
of a cleanroom or clean area. In the UK, British Standard 5295 is used to
classify cleanrooms. This standard is about to be superseded by BS EN ISO
14644-1.
Cleanrooms
are classified according to the number and size of particles permitted per
volume of air. Large numbers like "class 100" or "class
1000" refer to FED_STD-209E, and denote the number of particles of size
0.5 mm or larger permitted per cubic foot of air. The standard also allows
interpolation, so it is possible to describe e.g. "class 2000."
Small
numbers refer to ISO 14644-1 standards, which specify the decimal logarithm of
the number of particles 0.1 µm or larger permitted per cubic metre of air. So,
for example, an ISO class 5 cleanroom has at most 105 = 100,000 particles per
m³.
Both
FS 209E and ISO 14644-1 assume log-log relationships between particle size and
particle concentration. For that reason, there is no such thing as zero
particle concentration. Ordinary room air is approximately class 1,000,000 or
ISO 9.
Class
|
maximum particles/m3
|
FED STD 209E
equivalent |
|||||
>=0.1 µm
|
>=0.2 µm
|
>=0.3 µm
|
>=0.5 µm
|
>=1 µm
|
>=5 µm
|
||
ISO 1
|
10
|
2
|
|||||
ISO 2
|
100
|
24
|
10
|
4
|
|||
ISO 3
|
1,000
|
237
|
102
|
35
|
8
|
Class 1
|
|
ISO 4
|
10,000
|
2,370
|
1,020
|
352
|
83
|
Class 10
|
|
ISO 5
|
100,000
|
23,700
|
10,200
|
3,520
|
832
|
29
|
Class 100
|
ISO 6
|
1,000,000
|
237,000
|
102,000
|
35,200
|
8,320
|
293
|
Class 1,000
|
ISO 7
|
352,000
|
83,200
|
2,930
|
Class 10,000
|
|||
ISO 8
|
3,520,000
|
832,000
|
29,300
|
Class 100,000
|
|||
ISO 9
|
35,200,000
|
8,320,000
|
293,000
|
Room Air
|
maximum particles/m3
|
|||||
Class
|
>=0.5 µm
|
>=1 µm
|
>=5 µm
|
>=10 µm
|
>=25 µm
|
Class 1
|
3,000
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
|
Class 2
|
300,000
|
2,000
|
30
|
||
Class 3
|
1,000,000
|
20,000
|
4,000
|
300
|
|
Class 4
|
20,000
|
40,000
|
4,000
|
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