What distinguishes a cleanroom from a sterile environment?

Published: 1-May-2024

What are the key differences between these two contamination control environments? Gabor Hangosi from Kleanlabs discusses

In today's industrial landscape, the widespread adoption of cleanrooms and sterile environments across diverse sectors underscores a commitment to maintaining the highest standards in production and research.

These specialised environments are crucial, offering unparalleled control over product quality, precision, and reliability. 

The overarching aim is to safeguard products from any airborne contamination, a critical factor in sectors like electronics, where even a minute particle behind a smartphone's display is intolerable.

In this article, we explore the critical distinction between cleanrooms and sterile environments, key elements in various industries committed to high production and research standards.

What is the difference?

While both cleanrooms and sterile environments aim to control contamination, cleanrooms primarily focus on minimising particulate contamination to protect manufacturing processes. In contrast, sterile environments aim to eliminate all forms of microbial life for safety in medical and research applications.

Contamination control and air filtration

Cleanrooms control particulate levels, like dust and microbes, using standards and classifications for particle count and size, and employ HEPA or ULPA filters for continuous air purification. 

The key distinction lies in cleanrooms reducing particulate contamination, whereas sterile environments aim for complete microbial elimination

In contrast, sterile environments focus on eradicating all microbial life through methods like heat, chemicals, and irradiation.

The key distinction lies in cleanrooms reducing particulate contamination, whereas sterile environments aim for complete microbial elimination.

Environmental control

In cleanrooms, precise control of temperature, humidity, and pressure is crucial to maintaining specific levels of particulate cleanliness.

Sterile environments, however, prioritise absolute sterility over detailed environmental control, focusing on creating spaces entirely free of microbial life.

Application

In electronics, pharmaceuticals, biotechnology, and aerospace industries, cleanrooms are crucial for maintaining environments free of particulate contamination and ensuring high-quality manufacturing.

The key distinction lies in cleanrooms reducing particulate contamination, whereas sterile environments aim for complete microbial elimination

Conversely, sterile environments are vital in medical and research settings like operating theatres and laboratories, focusing on creating spaces devoid of microbial life for optimal safety and efficacy.

Guidelines for excellence in sterile manufacturing

Sterile manufacturing, essential in creating safe medical and pharmaceutical products, is divided into two methods. 

  • Terminal sterilisation sterilises the product after packaging, either using moist heat to allow steam penetration or dry heat with HEPA-filtered air
  • Aseptic manufacturing, on the other hand, is used when products can't be sterilised in their final packaging, requiring a controlled aseptic environment where filtration and heat treatment work together to ensure safety against potential contaminants like viruses or microplasmas

In environments where sterility is key, ensuring that everything from protective gear to work instruments is sterile is essential.

The concept of "grey zones", serving as intermediary spaces between different cleanliness levels, is highly effective for maintaining sterility.

These areas are crucial in cutting down cross-contamination risks. Utilising pressure cascades, where contaminants flow from cleaner to less clean areas, is a standard approach.

Sterile environments prioritise absolute sterility over detailed environmental control

Additionally, the flow of materials should be planned according to sterility grades. Pass boxes are a practical solution for moving items between highly sterile zones, reducing the need for staff movement in these sensitive areas.

Cleanroom solutions for precision-controlled environments

KleanLabs specialises in providing high-quality cleanroom solutions, tailored to meet the stringent standards of controlled environments.

Their products, designed to comply with EN ISO 14644, ensure optimal air cleanliness in cleanrooms.

Kleanlabs’ cleanroom solutions include cleanroom doors, cleanroom pass boxes, cleanroom cabinets and modular cleanroom solutions. All of them are designed for easy maintenance, resisting common cleaning agents.

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