Difference between revisions of "PhysicsCleanRoomParticleCountLog"

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The definition of a Class 10,000 clean room according to
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According to http://www.set3.com/standards.html
Federal Standard 209E, which has been recently replaced with ISO-146441 is
 
  
 +
Originally Federal Standard 209E defined a class 10,000 clean room based on the particle counts given below.  A class 10,000 clean room is currently defined as an ISO 7 clean room using the ISO standard 146441.
  
 
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{|border="1"  | cellpadding="20" cellspacing="0  class="wikitable"
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|-
 
|-
 
!
 
!
! ≥0.3 µm
 
 
! ≥0.5 µm
 
! ≥0.5 µm
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! ≥1 µm
 
! ≥5 µm
 
! ≥5 µm
 
|-
 
|-
 
|Goal || align="right" | 352,000 || align="right" | 83,200 || align="right" | 2,930
 
|Goal || align="right" | 352,000 || align="right" | 83,200 || align="right" | 2,930
 
|}
 
|}
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The clean room using the same above particle counts.
 +
  
 
The Physics clean room is about 200 <math>m^3</math>
 
The Physics clean room is about 200 <math>m^3</math>

Revision as of 18:37, 12 August 2011

According to http://www.set3.com/standards.html

Originally Federal Standard 209E defined a class 10,000 clean room based on the particle counts given below. A class 10,000 clean room is currently defined as an ISO 7 clean room using the ISO standard 146441.

Date maximum particles/m³
≥0.5 µm ≥1 µm ≥5 µm
Goal 352,000 83,200 2,930

The clean room using the same above particle counts.


The Physics clean room is about 200 [math]m^3[/math]

Date Counts
≥0.3 µm ≥0.5 µm ≥5 µm
Goal 79,400,000 16,640,000 586,000
8/11/11 6040 [math]\pm[/math] 2532 914 [math]\pm[/math] 491 33[math]\pm[/math] 34