Particle count validation for ISO 7 / Class 10,000 rooms demands more than periodic testing — it verifies that the HVAC system, HEPA filtration, airflow patterns, and room pressurization consistently maintain the cleanliness levels required for regulated manufacturing environments.
Why ISO Class 7 validation matters
ISO Class 7 (Class 10,000) cleanrooms are commonly used in pharmaceutical production, medical device manufacturing, biotechnology laboratories, and electronics assembly. Validation confirms that airborne particle concentrations remain within the limits specified by ISO 14644-1, ensuring product quality, process reliability, and regulatory compliance.
352,000
particles/m³ ≥0.5μm
83,200
particles/m³ ≥1.0μm
2,930
particles/m³ ≥5.0μm
Validation parameters
Particle count qualification should evaluate the cleanroom under defined operating conditions. Airflow distribution, filtration efficiency, recovery performance, and pressure differentials all contribute to maintaining compliance.
| Area | ISO Class | Particle Limit ≥0.5μm | Pressure |
|---|---|---|---|
| Critical Manufacturing | ISO 7 | ≤352,000 particles/m³ | +15 Pa |
| Support Area | ISO 8 | ≤3,520,000 particles/m³ | +5 Pa |
| Material Transfer | ISO 8 | ≤3,520,000 particles/m³ | 0 Pa |
The most reliable cleanrooms are not those that merely pass a certification test once — they are designed to maintain compliance continuously under real operating conditions.
Particle counting and monitoring
Validation should be performed using calibrated laser particle counters at predefined sampling locations. Testing should verify compliance at rest and, where required, during operational conditions. Monitoring programs help identify filtration degradation, airflow imbalances, and contamination risks before they affect production.
Need HVAC engineering consultation?
Our cleanroom HVAC specialists design, validate, and optimize classified environments for pharmaceutical, healthcare, biotechnology, and industrial manufacturing facilities.
Qualification documentation
Every ISO 7 cleanroom should be supported by a structured qualification process including URS → DQ → IQ → OQ → PQ. Incorporating validation requirements during the design stage reduces compliance risks and simplifies long-term cleanroom operation.

