Microbio - Environmental monitoring - non-viable particles

Particle counts invisible to the naked eye determine whether pharmaceutical manufacturing areas meet regulatory classifications - exceeding limits triggers investigations, production delays, and questions about product quality that cascade through entire operations. Non-viable particle monitoring using laser particle counting technology provides real-time cleanroom classification verification essential for pharmaceutical and medical device manufacturing environments where particulate contamination threatens product quality and regulatory compliance. This optical methodology following ISO 14644-1, ISO 14698-1, and ISO 21501-3 standards quantifies airborne particles at 0.3 and 5.0 micron size channels, establishing whether controlled environments meet specified cleanliness classifications throughout production operations, interventions, and at-rest conditions. Cleanroom classification requires documented particle counting demonstrating that air filtration systems consistently deliver the designed cleanliness level, with initial qualification establishing baseline performance and periodic re-qualification verifying sustained compliance over facility lifecycle. Pharmaceutical aseptic processing demands continuous or frequent particle monitoring in Grade A critical zones, providing real-time contamination detection that triggers investigations when particle levels exceed action limits during sterile operations. Medical device manufacturers producing implantables, contact lenses, or other contamination-sensitive products employ particle counting to validate that manufacturing environments meet product-specific cleanliness requirements, with test frequency reflecting contamination risk and regulatory expectations. The dual-channel measurement enables both classification per ISO 14644-1 cleanliness classes and detection of contamination events generating elevated large particle counts indicating filter failures, procedural breaches, or material introduction problems.

No.
100405
Standard
Stage category
Sample type
Environmental sample
Sample requirement (type)
N/A
Equipment
Other
Lead Time Standard (Days)
5
Lead Time Express (Days)
3
Lead Time Super Express (Days)
2
Accredited
Yes
Test facility
In House
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