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Clean rooms HVAC System

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Presentation on theme: "Clean rooms HVAC System"— Presentation transcript:

1 Clean rooms HVAC System
Presented by: Salma Jabeen 2010-MS-BAB-01 UNIVERSITY OF ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY, LAHORE

2 INTRODUCTION Federal standard 209E defines ISO 14664-1 defines
“a cleanroom as a room in which the concentration of airborne particles is controlled to specified limits.” ISO defines “A room in which the concentration of airborne particles is controlled, and which is constructed and used in a manner to minimize the introduction, generation and retention of particles inside the room and in which other relevant parameters, e.g. temperature, humidity and pressure are controlled as necessary.”

3 PARTICULATE CONTROL Particulate and microbial contamination
Particulate concentration and dispersion

4 WHERE PROVIDED? Cleanrooms are typically used in manufacturing, packaging, and research facilities associated with following industries: Semiconductor Pharmaceutical Aerospace Miscellaneous application Advanced material research, Laser and optic industries, Microelectronics facility, Paint room, Aseptic foods production and High infection risk areas of hospital.

5 SOURCE OF CONTAMINATION
Contamination source may be internal or external Size to several hundred microns Particles >5 microns tend to settle quickly unless air blown. Greatest concern “particle may not deposit on the product” Control is primarily through AIRFLOW DESIGN

6 NEED OF CLASSIFICATION
Particles of different sizes behave differently as air moves through a room. For example, “in an 8’ high room, a particle in a 50 micron range might take 60 seconds to settle, while a 1 micron particle might take 15 hours to settle.” Before any methods of contamination control of airborne particles can be applied, a decision must be made as to how critical this particulate matter is to the process or product. This is done by classification of room to requisite class level.

7 CLEANLINESS CLASS

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11 DIFFERENCE B/W CLEAN ROOM & CONVENTIONAL HVAC SYSTEM
Clean room design encompasses much more than traditional temperature and humidity control. Design must consider aspects such as control of particulate, microbial, electrostatic discharge, gaseous contaminants, airflow pattern control, pressurization and industrial engineering aspects. The primary design goal of clean room is the particulate control

12 Clean room differs from an ordinary ventilated room in number of ways;
Increased Air supply: Office or shop (2-10 air change per hour) Clean room (20-60 air change per hour) High Efficiency filter: High efficiency particle air(HEPA)>99.97 % efficient in removing particles greater than 0.3microns Terminal air filter Room pressurization and pass through grills Positively pressured

13 HVAC DESIGN CONSIDERATION
Supplying airflow in sufficient volume and cleanliness to support the cleanliness rating of the room. Introducing air in a manner to prevent stagnant areas where particles could accumulate. Conditioning air to meet clean room temperature, humidity and filtration requirements. Ensuring enough conditioned makeup air to maintain the specified positive pressurization. Air flow distribution and control Filtration Air re-circulation

14 AIR FLOW PATTERN Depending on the degree of cleanliness required, it is important for air systems to deliver considerably more air than would be needed just to meet temperature and humidity design. Particles of different sizes behave differently as air moves through a room. Selection of the airflow pattern “a major step in clean room design.” Because airflow is such an important aspect of particle control, the design of a clean room requires careful consideration of air motion and airflow patterns.

15 UNIDIRECTIONAL FLOW PATTERN

16 Clean rooms; class 100 and below have unidirectional flow pattern.

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18 NON-UNIDIRECTIONAL (TURBULENT OR CONVENTIONAL FLOW)

19 Conventional flow clean rooms;
class 1000 and 10,000 have non-unidirectional air flow patterns.

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22 MIXED FLOW PATTERN

23 Class 1000 and 10,000 have mixed air flow patterns.

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25 FILTRATION

26 AIR RE-CIRCULATION The filtered air entering a clean room can be 100% exhausted or A proportion re-circulated

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29 OTHER IMP. CONSIDERATIONS
Humidity control: Clean room service is intended for critical applications and therefore humidity control is critical and takes precedence over temperature control. The clean room HVAC design for latent load should consider the high operational ambient wet bulb data, not mean coincident dry bulb/wet bulb data as in conventional HVAC designs. The reliability and availability of the HVAC system is critical to the success of the clean room manufacturing application. Typical design criteria are; Temperature: 66°F to 76°F RH: 50% to 60% Fresh Air: 20% to 100% fresh air

30 COMMON PRACTICES IN CLEAN ROOM DESIGN

31 SPECIAL DESIGN FEATURES FOR UNIDIRECTIONAL AIRFLOW DESIGN
Unidirectional airflow pattern is a requirement for absolute cleanliness and is conventionally applied to spaces demanding class 100 levels or below. “Design principle is the air velocity” Higher air velocity is advantageous in particle removal/settlement. IES Standard RP CC defines levels of acceptance of velocity as “Average measured clean air velocity should be 90 FPM”. All measured values should fall within ±20% of the measured average. Common approach is to “simply fix the filter velocity at 90 fpm and then specify different ceiling coverage percentages for different classification levels.” Raised access floor are most suitable applications in Class 100 and class 10 facilities. Primary benefit is the achievement of unidirectional flow of filtered air entering the clean room.

32 HVAC COMPONENTS ARRANGEMENT

33 CLASS 10

34 HVAC SYSTEM DESIGN EXAMPLE
Considering a manufacturing facility, this is divided into 3 separate zones according to application and cleanliness requirements. Problem Statement: To suggest the typical clean room HVAC requirements for each area.

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36 DESIGN The class 10 Clean room shall have 100% HEPA filter coverage at the ceiling, re-circulating fans, raised floor and return air chase, pressurization, vibration and noise control. The class 1000 Clean room will have a raised floor or low wall return, 30% HEPA filter coverage at the ceiling/duct, pressurization, vibration and noise control. The class 10,000 Clean room will have 15% HEPA filter coverage in a duct, side wall return, pressurization, vibration and noise control.

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38 Clean room costs rise, as the clean room class gets lower
This rise in cost is associated with increased filtration and air handling equipment and the tighter the temperature and humidity controls the higher the cost. On average the larger the room the lower the square foot cost within that clean room class.

39 Leakage in cfm = √(Room pressure in wg) x 4005
ENERGY EFFICIENCY The definition of “Laminar flow “, 90±20% does not exist officially. As a common industry practice, manufacturers and designers design the system at this velocity. Velocity higher than this may not be efficient and may result in over design that may be very energy inefficient. Over pressurization is waste of energy that not only entails high capital costs but also increases the operating costs. Leakage through fixed openings should be restricted as much as possible. The amount of expected leakage can be calculated from the following; Leakage in cfm = √(Room pressure in wg) x 4005 (one inch water gauge pressure is equivalent to wind velocity of 4005 fpm)

40 An important step towards energy efficient design is the right classification of the building.
Capture savings by creating mini clean room environments.  Challenge the room volume. Specify high efficiency components, including high efficiency motors and fans, chillers and other equipment.

41 CONCLUSION Cleanrooms are like race cars. When properly designed and built, they are highly efficient performance machines. When poorly designed and built, they operate poorly and are unreliable.

42 THANKS


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