Cleanroom HVAC Design: ISO 14644 Class 5–8, Air Changes, Pressure Cascade (Pillar)

A cleanroom is defined by the maximum particle count per m³ at 0.5 micron and larger. ISO 14644-1:2015 specifies nine classes (ISO 1 through ISO 9). Pharmaceutical manufacturing typically requires ISO 5-8; semiconductor fabrication ISO 1-4. The HVAC design dictates whether a cleanroom certifies — air changes, filtration, pressure cascade, and air-flow regimes are the four levers.

This pillar covers cleanroom classification, air change determination, pressure cascade design, and recovery-time targets.

ISO 14644 classification

ISO 14644-1:2015 specifies maximum particle counts per m³ at various particle sizes:

Class 0.1 μm 0.2 μm 0.3 μm 0.5 μm 1.0 μm 5.0 μm
ISO 5 3,520 832 29
ISO 6 35,200 8,320 293
ISO 7 352,000 83,200 2,930
ISO 8 3,520,000 832,000 29,300

For pharmaceutical applications, EU GMP Annex 1 (revised 2023) maps these to four grades: A (= ISO 5 at-rest), B (= ISO 5 at-rest, ISO 7 in-operation), C (= ISO 7 at-rest, ISO 8 in-operation), D (= ISO 8 at-rest).

Grade A typical applications: critical sterile filling, lyophilization, aseptic transfer.

Grade B: surrounding zones for Grade A, sterile manufacturing background.

Grade C: solution preparation prior to sterile filtration, washing.

Grade D: clean utility, less critical functions.

Air changes per class

ISO 14644 doesn’t directly specify air changes — those are pulled from industry standards (USP, ISPE, EU GMP):

Class / Grade Typical air changes (ACH) Notes
ISO 5 / Grade A 240-720+ Unidirectional flow at 0.36-0.54 m/s
ISO 5 / Grade B 30-60 Mixed flow (turbulent) sufficient for most applications
ISO 6 25-40 Mixed flow
ISO 7 15-30 Mixed flow
ISO 8 10-20 Mixed flow

ACH and unidirectional velocity are different things. A Grade A workstation has 0.45 m/s unidirectional flow over the working zone — this translates to 600+ ACH for a small workstation but only 60 ACH for a large room with the same downflow.

For mixed-flow cleanrooms (Grade B-D), the air change rate is what matters for particle dilution and recovery. Higher ACH = faster particle removal.

Pressure cascade design

Adjacent zones of different cleanliness levels are kept at different positive pressures so air flows from cleaner to less-clean. EU GMP Annex 1 specifies minimum pressure differentials:

Cascade type Min ΔP
Grade A to Grade B 10-15 Pa
Grade B to Grade C 10-15 Pa
Grade C to Grade D 10-15 Pa
Grade D to corridor 5-10 Pa
Corridor to outdoor 5+ Pa

Total cascade from outermost zone to a sterile manufacturing area can exceed 50 Pa across the entire facility. Door-opening force becomes a real concern — same NFPA 92 110 N limit applies.

Pressure is maintained by:

  • Each zone gets net positive supply over exhaust = the “leakage budget”
  • Doors typically interlocked; only one open at a time
  • Air-lock chambers with inflatable door seals at major transitions

Filtration design

Cleanroom airstreams use multi-stage filtration:

1. Pre-filter (MERV-8 to MERV-11) at AHU intake — captures lint, pollen, larger particles

2. Secondary filter (MERV-14 to MERV-17) downstream of cooling coil — captures particles to 0.1-0.3 μm

3. Terminal HEPA / ULPA (HEPA = 99.97% at 0.3 μm; ULPA = 99.999% at 0.12 μm) at room ceiling, immediately above the work zone

For Grade A: terminal HEPA H14 (99.995% at 0.3 μm) at 0.45 m/s downflow over the working zone.

For Grade B-D: terminal HEPA H13 or H14 at distributed ceiling locations, mixed flow.

HEPA filters are sealed in housings to prevent leakage. Periodic DOP (DiOctyl Phthalate) testing per ISO 14644-3 confirms zero leakage past the seal.

Recovery time

After a contamination event (open door, visitor, equipment movement), how long does the room take to return to specification? ISO 14644 doesn’t mandate; ISPE Baseline Guide recommends:

Class Recovery time target
Grade A < 1 minute (for unidirectional flow zones)
Grade B < 15 minutes
Grade C < 20 minutes
Grade D < 30 minutes

Recovery time scales inversely with ACH:


t_recovery = (ln(C_initial/C_target)) / (ACH/60)

For 100x reduction (typical decontamination event):

  • 30 ACH: t = 4.6 minutes / 0.5 = ~9 min
  • 60 ACH: t = ~5 min
  • 240 ACH: t = ~1 min

Higher ACH = faster recovery, also higher fan power. The trade-off is cost vs. operational continuity.

Worked example: ISO 7 cleanroom (Grade C), 50 m² × 3 m height

Volume: 150 m³.

Required ACH for ISO 7: 25 ACH.

Supply airflow: 25 × 150 / 60 = 62.5 m³/min = 3,750 m³/h = ~2,200 cfm.

Pressure cascade: room at +20 Pa relative to corridor at +10 Pa relative to outdoor at 0 Pa.

Air balance: supply 2,200 cfm + exhaust 2,000 cfm + leakage 200 cfm to corridor = positive pressure ~20 Pa achieved through leakage path geometry.

Filtration:

  • Pre-filter MERV-11 at AHU intake (50-80 Pa initial dP)
  • Cooling coil
  • Secondary MERV-15 (60-100 Pa initial)
  • Final HEPA H13 at terminal (60 Pa initial; designed for 240 Pa terminal at design)

Total fan static pressure: 50 + 100 + 240 + duct + diffuser = ~600-800 Pa.

DOP test annually; HEPA replacement every 5-7 years (or earlier if dP rises 2x initial).

Recovery time at 25 ACH: ln(100/1) / (25/60) = 4.6 / 0.42 = ~11 min for 100x reduction. Acceptable for Grade C.

Common cleanroom HVAC mistakes

1. Sizing supply by ACH alone, not by particle balance. Real-world particle generation (operators, equipment, machinery) is the load; ACH is a proxy.

2. Pressure cascade not balanced for door-opening events. Single-door opens, pressure collapses momentarily; specification compromised.

3. HEPA bypass through housing seal. Most common contamination source; require DOP test certificate before commissioning.

4. Recovery time not measured. Performance-tested with smoke or particle injection during commissioning; some projects skip this.

5. No back-up power for critical pharmacy / sterile zones. Power loss = loss of pressure = loss of cleanliness; UPS or backup generator essential for Grade A/B.

Quick checklist

  • [ ] ISO class / GMP grade established for each zone
  • [ ] ACH per ISPE Baseline Guide and project SOP
  • [ ] Pressure cascade designed (10-15 Pa per grade transition)
  • [ ] Filtration train: pre-filter + cooling coil + secondary + terminal HEPA
  • [ ] HEPA H13/H14 at terminal with sealed housing
  • [ ] DOP test plan (annual + post-installation)
  • [ ] Recovery time tested during commissioning
  • [ ] Door interlocks on critical transitions
  • [ ] Backup power for Grade A/B
  • [ ] Pre-installation HEPA test pre-shipment

References: ISO 14644-1:2015 Cleanrooms — Classification of Air Cleanliness; ISO 14644-3 Test Methods; EU GMP Annex 1 (revised 2023); ISPE Baseline Guide on HVAC for Pharmaceutical Manufacturing; ASHRAE Handbook HVAC Apps 2023 Ch 18 (Cleanroom HVAC).

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