What is a Cleanroom? Classification under ISO 14644 and GMP A/B/C/D
What is a Cleanroom? Classification under ISO 14644 and GMP A/B/C/D
The "cleanroom" concept has long featured in Vietnamese industry — alongside FDI pharma and electronics plants. But not everyone understands how a cleanroom differs from an enclosed room, or what A/B/C/D and Class 100/1,000/10,000 actually mean. This article gives the fullest and most accessible overview of the definitions, classifications, and characteristics of modern cleanrooms.
1. What is a cleanroom?
In plain terms, a cleanroom is a room that is not dirty — no dust, no bacteria — while also controlling temperature, humidity, and pressure.
That said, the term "cleanroom" means different things in different industries and environments. For example:
- Healthcare (hospitals): operating rooms, negative-pressure isolation rooms.
- Pharmaceuticals: injectable compounding rooms, vaccine vial-filling rooms.
- Electronics companies: photolithography rooms, chip-assembly rooms.
- Premium food: infant-formula filling rooms, probiotic production rooms.
- Cosmetics: lipstick and cream filling rooms.
Each industry has its own standard, but all rest on two major standards systems: ISO 14644 and GMP-WHO/EU.
2. Cleanroom classification
Cleanrooms are classified along several axes:
a. By cleanliness
You can split them into:
- Absolute cleanrooms (below Class 100) — semiconductor production, vaccines, biologics.
- Relative cleanrooms (Class 100 and above) — standard pharma, food, cosmetics.
b. By function (application)
You can split them into:
- Hospital cleanrooms (OR, ICU, microbiology lab).
- Pharmaceutical cleanrooms (compounding, primary packaging).
- Electronics cleanrooms (chips, hard drives, optical pickups).
- Cosmetics cleanrooms.
c. By standard
You can split by US (FS 209E — withdrawn but still referenced), Japan (JIS B 9920), Europe (EU GMP), Germany (VDI 2083)… European standards now dominate, with cleanrooms graded A, B, C, D.
3. The ISO 14644-1 classification
This is the current international standard — classifying by the number of particles ≥ 0.5 µm per m³ of air:
| ISO class | Particles ≥ 0.5 µm/m³ | FS 209E equivalent |
|---|---|---|
| ISO 1 | ~10 | — |
| ISO 2 | ~100 | — |
| ISO 3 | 1,020 | Class 1 |
| ISO 4 | 10,200 | Class 10 |
| ISO 5 | 102,000 | Class 100 |
| ISO 6 | 1,020,000 | Class 1,000 |
| ISO 7 | 10,200,000 | Class 10,000 |
| ISO 8 | 102,000,000 | Class 100,000 |
| ISO 9 | 1,020,000,000 | Ambient air |
4. The GMP classification (EU GMP Annex 1)
In pharmaceuticals, GMP-WHO and EU GMP classify cleanrooms by 4 letter grades: A, B, C, D. Each grade has 2 measurement states: at rest (no people, no operating equipment) and in operation.
Grade A — High-risk operating area
- Sterile compounding and vial filling, cell-culture handling.
- Requirement: ISO 5 in both states, with laminar flow at 0.36-0.54 m/s.
- Final filter: HEPA H14 + ULPA U15/U17 inside a LAF box.
Grade B — Background to Grade A
- The area surrounding Grade A, in the same room but not directly inside the LAF.
- Requirement: ISO 5 at rest, ISO 7 in operation.
- Final filter: HEPA H14 + ULPA U15 in the FFU.
Grade C — Lower-risk area
- Non-sterile compounding, intermediate processing.
- Requirement: ISO 7 at rest, ISO 8 in operation.
- Final filter: HEPA H14.
Grade D — The lowest GMP area
- Secondary packaging, pharma warehouse.
- Requirement: ISO 8 at rest; no in-operation requirement.
- Final filter: HEPA H13.
5. Common cleanroom characteristics
Whatever the grade, cleanrooms share four core characteristics:
- Very low dust, near-zero microbial counts.
- Particle control down to 0.3 µm (and lower for high-end cleanrooms).
- High airflow and recirculation — 20-60 air changes per hour depending on grade.
- Minimal influence from the outside environment — maintained by filtration + differential pressure + airlocks.
6. Technical structure of a standard cleanroom
A complete cleanroom has 7 main components:
a. Envelope
- 50-100 mm EPS / PU / rockwool sandwich panels with powder-coated or stainless surfaces.
- Gasketed airtight doors with observation windows.
- Walkable or T-grid ceilings for FFUs.
b. Floor
- Anti-static vinyl, or raised floor for vertical-laminar cleanrooms.
- Coved corners (cove) for easy cleaning.
c. HVAC system (AHU/MAU)
- Pre Filter G4 + Medium F8/F9 + HEPA (if not at the terminal).
- Cooling coil, heating coil, humidifier/dehumidifier.
- Temperature, humidity, and pressure controllers.
d. Final-stage air supply
- Terminal HEPA Box or FFU.
- Filter grade per the cleanroom requirement.
e. Return air
- Raised-floor return (for vertical laminar cleanrooms) or low-wall return slots.
f. Airlocks and anterooms
- Buffer zones between cleanroom grades, maintaining a 10-15 Pa differential.
g. Monitoring system (BMS)
- Differential-pressure, temperature, humidity, and online particle sensors.
- Threshold-based alarms.
7. Differential pressure — an inviolable principle
Each cleanroom grade must be at least 10-15 Pa higher than the less clean grade. Example GMP cascade:
Production area (D) +15 Pa → Compounding area (C) +30 Pa → Sterile area (B) +45 Pa → LAF (A) +60 Pa
This ensures dust and bacteria do not "flow back" into cleaner areas when doors open. Negative-pressure rooms (such as infectious-disease isolation rooms) work the other way — they are lower in pressure than their surroundings to keep pathogens contained.
8. Four operating variables to control
- Particles — measured with a particle counter, with thresholds per class.
- Microorganisms — measured by settle plates and air samplers (CFU/m³).
- Temperature and humidity — typically 20±2°C and 45-60% RH (industry-dependent).
- Differential pressure — continuously measured by DP sensors.
Conclusion
A cleanroom is not a "sealed box" — it is an integrated system of architecture, HVAC, filtration (Pre + Medium + HEPA / ULPA), environmental control, and operating procedure. Understanding ISO 14644 and GMP A/B/C/D properly is the first condition for designing, operating, and validating any pharma, electronics, food, or hospital cleanroom successfully.
About Green Filter
Green Filter supplies filters for every cleanroom grade end-to-end, from ISO 8 (Class 100,000 / GMP D) to ISO 3 (Class 1): HEPA, ULPA, Medium, Pre Filters, and FFUs. Green Filter's technical team will help you design the right filter chain per room from your drawings.
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See also: GMP cleanrooms for pharma plants · Cleanrooms for electronics & semiconductors · AHU/MAU and the 3-stage filter train.