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Disinfection product purification workshop
Disinfection product purification workshop
Product details
Clean and sterile workshop
It also achieves both dust-free and sterile effects in the workshop. It is the foundation of pollution control. Without a clean room, it is impossible to mass produce pollution sensitive parts. In FED-STD-2, a clean room is defined as a room equipped with air filtration, distribution, optimization, construction materials, and devices, with specific operating procedures to control the concentration of suspended particles in the air, thereby achieving an appropriate level of particle cleanliness. A clean room refers to a specially designed room that removes pollutants such as particles, harmful air, and bacteria from the air within a certain spatial range, and controls the indoor temperature, cleanliness, indoor pressure, airflow velocity and distribution, noise vibration, lighting, and static electricity within a certain required range.
A sterile and dust-free workshop refers to an indoor environment that can achieve both dust-free and sterile effects simultaneously. It is the foundation of pollution control. Without a dust-free workshop, pollution sensitive parts cannot be produced. A cleanroom is a room equipped with air filtration, distribution, optimization, construction materials, and devices, which control the concentration of suspended particles in the air according to its characteristic operating procedures to achieve a certain level of particle cleanliness.
There are two types of air flow in a sterile and dust-free workshop: laminar flow (suspended particles remain in the laminar layer); The other type is non laminar (suspended particle flow is turbulent). A clean room equipped with a general air conditioning system has a non laminar (turbulent) flow of indoor air, which can quickly mix suspended particles carried in the air and make stationary particles in the room fluctuate, and some air may become stagnant.
A sterile clean room is a comprehensive project, and its environment should have reasonable flow routes for people, materials, and machinery, division of process and maintenance areas, measures to prevent indoor pollution from the external environment, and building measures to ensure indoor design parameters (temperature, humidity, cleanliness, etc.).

It also achieves both dust-free and sterile effects in the workshop. It is the foundation of pollution control. Without a clean room, it is impossible to mass produce pollution sensitive parts. In FED-STD-2, a clean room is defined as a room equipped with air filtration, distribution, optimization, construction materials, and devices, with specific operating procedures to control the concentration of suspended particles in the air, thereby achieving an appropriate level of particle cleanliness. A clean room refers to a specially designed room that removes pollutants such as particles, harmful air, and bacteria from the air within a certain spatial range, and controls the indoor temperature, cleanliness, indoor pressure, airflow velocity and distribution, noise vibration, lighting, and static electricity within a certain required range.

A sterile and dust-free workshop refers to an indoor environment that can achieve both dust-free and sterile effects simultaneously. It is the foundation of pollution control. Without a dust-free workshop, pollution sensitive parts cannot be produced. A cleanroom is a room equipped with air filtration, distribution, optimization, construction materials, and devices, which control the concentration of suspended particles in the air according to its characteristic operating procedures to achieve a certain level of particle cleanliness.
There are two types of air flow in a sterile and dust-free workshop: laminar flow (suspended particles remain in the laminar layer); The other type is non laminar (suspended particle flow is turbulent). A clean room equipped with a general air conditioning system has a non laminar (turbulent) flow of indoor air, which can quickly mix suspended particles carried in the air and make stationary particles in the room fluctuate, and some air may become stagnant.
A sterile clean room is a comprehensive project, and its environment should have reasonable flow routes for people, materials, and machinery, division of process and maintenance areas, measures to prevent indoor pollution from the external environment, and building measures to ensure indoor design parameters (temperature, humidity, cleanliness, etc.).

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