Clean Room Clean room HVAC engineering is not an easy thing. It takes a
mix of engineering skills, understanding the particle-generating
potential of the process, and experience.
The amount of air is different in an ISO Class 6 and ISO Class 8 clean
room. This means that the HVAC system must be capable of conditioning
more than double the air. However, classification alone isn't sufficient
for calculating the airflow.
The standard ISO 14644-1:2015 does not specify the air changes per hour
(ACPH) for each Clean Room class because it depends on many factors.
The ACH is the number of total replacements of a room's air in one hour,
and the ISO 14644-1:2015 only tells you the result that you must aim
for: the maximum concentration limits for particles.
For example, for an ISO Class 7 Clean Room, particles smaller than 0.5
microns (>=0.1 um, >=0.2 um, >=0.3 um) are not taken into consideration.
The concentration of particles of >=0.5 um should be below 352,000;
particles of >=1 micron should be below 83,200; and particles of >=5
microns should be below 2,930.
ISO classification doesn't dictate airflow
However, the ISO cleanliness level (ISO 8, 7, 6, and 5) gives a hint on
the ACH range required. Notice that the term "range" is used and not
"value".
A clean room with activities that generate few particles versus one that
generates a lot of airborne particles, even if both are ISO 7, will not
require the same air changes per hour.
Various recommendations for air change ranges can be found on the
Internet. Me cart uses a proprietary clean room airflow calculator, and
we assumed 10 to 30 ACH for an ISO 8; 30 to 65 ACH for an ISO 7; 80 to
150 ACH for an ISO 6; 200 to 450 ACH for an ISO 5.
If there is a significant generation of particles in the process, the
higher number in the range is selected. This is a rule of thumb only.
The air changes per hour and cubic feet per minute (CFM, and so-called
airflow) must be calculated by an HVAC engineer based on experience and
understanding of the particle-generating potential of the process.
What influences clean room HVAC engineering?
It is easy to make a room clean if no one is inside, with no equipment,
and no material movement. But operations occur in clean rooms and must
be accounted for in the HVAC calculation.
Below are some other elements that influence the required airflow:
- Clean room ISO classification
- The layout of the clean room
- The number of people working in the room
- The equipment in the room (heat gain)
- The use of a fume hood or bio safety cabinet (air extraction)
- The lighting system
- The pressure differential
- The outside temperature and humidity
- The precision level required
Let's take a closer look at each of these factors.
The layout of the Clean Room
The volume of air in the Clean Room will influence the amount of airflow
needed. The bigger the room, the more air you need. The width, length,
and height of the classified rooms and their layout must be used for
HVAC calculations.
People often forget that the height of the room directly impacts the
airflow. One way to save on costs is to lower the ceiling. You can see
the difference by comparing the airflow in the calculator using the same
inputs but varying the size of the room or the height of the ceiling.
The number of people working in the room
The airborne contamination level of a Clean Room depends largely upon
the activities in the room and the personnel.
People are responsible for most of the particles generated in a Clean
Room. Airborne particles, such as skin flakes, cosmetics, perfume,
spittle, clothing debris (lint, fibers) and hair, are the usual
suspects.
When designing the HVAC system, the number of people working in the room
at the same time must be taken into account. The more people working in
the Clean Room, the more airflow is needed to get rid of the
contaminants.
People generate airborne contaminants, but also heat. The number of
operators is also used to calculate the level of conditioning to
compensate for the heat that they produce.
The staff in the Clean Room usually wear coveralls to limit
contamination. Therefore, it is important to maintain a comfortable
environment, usually between 66.5Degree F and 70Degree F (19Degree C and 21Degree C).
The equipment in the room
Similar to people, equipment generates heat and dust. The heat gain
produced by the equipment inside the Clean Room is used to determine the
cooling required.
The equipment in the room, along with the product manufacturing,
generate dust that must be removed with the correct amount of air.
The fume hood or bio safety cabinet
Fume hoods and laminar flow cabinet need constant air supply - just like
the Clean Room. This air supply must be accounted for in the Clean Room
HVAC calculations.
Moreover, if the fume hood exhausts air outside the building, like with
a bio safety cabinet, the exhausted air must be replaced with fresh air.
This fresh air will need to be conditioned (temperature and relative
humidity), and the process to achieve that requires a larger air make-up
or air handling unit (AHU).
If the air extracted from the hood is not accounted for in the HVAC
calculations, there might not be enough air pushed into the room to
maintain positive pressurization.
On the flip side, the pressurization may become too negative and suck in
some dirty air from the exterior of the room.
The lighting system
The required level of lighting will also affect the heat generated
inside the Clean Room and therefore the cooling required.
Regular office lighting of 300 lux versus high-precision lighting of
1200 lux will not generate the same quantity of heat.
The pressure differential
The pressure must be greater in more stringent classified rooms, so the
air leaks towards the lesser clean rooms.
Positive pressure prevents dirty air from entering into the Clean Room.
In a negative-pressurized clean room, the opposite occurs: the airflow
must be greater in the adjacent room.
The outside temperature and humidity
If air can be re-circulated in the Clean Room, the outside weather only
slightly impacts the HVAC system.
However, for Clean Rooms working with hazardous products, the air
make-up can go as high as 100% of fresh air. In these types of Clean
Rooms, the HVAC systems are more complex.
For example, some regions in winter the HVAC systems need to take the
outside air at -22Degree F (-30Degree C), warm it up to 68Degree F (20 Degree C), remove the
humidity, and bring it into the room, over and over.
The precision level required Last but certainly not least, the
degree of precision you need will also influence the design of the
HVAC system.
High-precision temperature control systems can control to +- 0.25Degree F (+-
0.15Degree C) and to +- 2% for humidity.
Clean rooms rarely need that high degree of precision. In most cases, +-
2Degree F (+- 1Degree C) precision for temperature and +- 10% for humidity is
sufficient. The level of precision depends on the operations in the
clean room.
How do you calculate CFM for a clean room?
You can read this article for a simplified CFM calculation example or
try the clean room design calculator to get an approximation of the CFM,
ACH per classified room, and quantity of lighting fixtures.
The Clean Room design calculator also gives you an estimate on the
number of HEPA filters that are needed and the number of low air return
you need for your clean room.
Remember, though, these are only estimations. Airflow must be calculated
by an HVAC engineer. Many of the elements listed above are not taken
into account in the calculator.