Energy Efficient Design

The effective utilization of resources and the sustainable use of our environment are a requirement of our time. HS-Luftfilterbau GmbH stirves to optimzie it's ISO 14001 certified production by the useage of innovative materials and to increase the energy efficiency of our products. Most of our prodcuts haven proven in the field that high filtration efficiency does not exclude a reduction of the operational costs.

Quality

HS Luftfilterbau supplies uncompromising quality. This is what our customers expect from us. Therefore, HS Luftfilterbau GmbH implemented a highly effective quality and environmental management system. Continuous improvement processes are part of our company culture and ensure that all processes lead to satisfaction of the concerning parties. Our core ideals are founded on our ISO 9001 & ISO 14001 and KTA 1401 cerzified quality assurance system.

Cleanroom / Pharma / Medical

The latest production processes e.g. in the microelectronics and pharmaceutical industries require highest degrees of purity of the environment. HS-Luftfilterbau GmbH operates ultramodern production and test facilities for HEPA, ULPA and molecular filters to maintain clean and sterile enviroments. All our products are intensively tested according to internationals standards before leaving our factory.

HVAC / Ventilation

Clean air and healthy climate affect the well being of people. HS Luftfilterbau GmbH offers a comprehensive range of high quality air filters ensure optimum ventilation of working, residential, commercial and office spaces. A careful choice of materials guarantees energy and economic efficiency.

About Air Filtration

Air is essential for the survival of mankind. Only slight changes in its combination will make it useless for humans and animals. While being exposed to atmospheric pressure, the intake of air containing less than 12 percent oxygen as well as more than five percent carbon dioxide is dangerous to living beings. Over a longer period of time, changes in the mixture of air might have a profound impact on health.
Humans use up about 30 liters of oxygen per hour. Hence, our need for air is likewise small: 150 liter/h or 0.15 m³/h. However, because we also produce carbon dioxide our body requires about 5 m³/h of fresh air in order to keep the amount of carbon dioxide below a life-threatening level.  When installing an air conditioning (AC) system it is sufficient to determine the amount of air needed. It will usually be set at 15 - 20 m³ per person and hour. However, larger volumes of air might be necessary for managing warmth and cold or draw off polluted air.

Keeping the air clean of dust and aerosols is not only important for maintaining buildings and their interior, it also guarantees healthy inhabitants and their well being.

How filters work

Air filter are used to extract particles out of airflows entering ventilation systems as well as contaminated or polluted air, e.g. in nuclear power plants, laboratories and isolation wards. Lately, air filter are also commonly found in industrial processes, in high-tech areas, or other applications with low occurrences of dust. Not considering carbon filters – which are used to absorb gas and odor – filters are classified as follows: Coarse dust filter, fine dust and high efficiency filter, HEPA-, and ULPA-filter. They are classified due to their filter media, it‘s particle holding capacity, as well as the effect used for absorbing – hence, due to their area of application. Furthermore, there are electro filters, which work on the electrostatic level. However, these filters play only a minor part in the field of ventilation technology due to reasons of safety and costs of ownership.

Here we concentrate on fibre based filters because most of our products base on such. The filter's ability to retain particles depends on physical and mechanical characteristics such as diffusion, interception, impaction, and filter effect. Electrostatic effects between particles and fibers are also significant.

Interception Effect: Small, light elements are able to be carried past the fiber by the airflow. If the particle‘s center gets closer to the fiber than the particle‘s diameter [Dp], it gets caught and sticks to the fiber.
The speed of the air stream has no effect on interception as long as it doesn‘t change the fiber‘s shape. The bigger the particle, the smaller the fiber and the gap between them, the more effectively interception works. Meaning: The filter media should contain lots of small fibers of the same diameter as the particle to be adhered.

 

Diffusion Effect: Particles below 1 µm in size don‘t follow the airflow past the fibers. They are influenced by the Brownian motion: Molecules in the air make these small particles obtain a zigzag motion. When touching the fibers they will adhere to it. The possibility that these particles attach themselves to a fiber increases with a decreasing amount of speed and decreasing particle and fiber size.

Screening Effect: Particles that are bigger than the passage between two fibers are blocked by them.

Impaction Effect: Heavier particles‘ moment of inertia is too big for them to follow the airflow running around the fiber.  Those particles keep following their original path and therefore impact the fiber on it‘s air side. Inertia increases with the speed of the airflow, particle size and a decreasing fiber size.

 

Electrostatic Effect: Electrostatic fields are installed as plate condenser as an active filtration element. Alternatively, they can be preloaded onto the fibers of synthetic filter media. Thus, around the fibers or collectors respectivly an electric field will form, which will attract complementary charged particles. Precharged electrostatic within the fibers will abate after the filter’s initiation.
External influences may benefit or weaken this effect.

 

A fibre filters efficiency is depending on all these effects. There is a particle size range beteen 0,1 to 0,3 µm where, depending upon the specific filtermedia, the combination of these effects work worst. Such particles are to big for true diffusion effect but too lightweight and small to be filtered by impaction, screening or interception. This particle size is called MPPS (Most Penetrating Particle Size). High performance filters such as EPA, HEPA and ULPA filters have their efficiency stated in this particle range determining it as the absolute minimum efficiency. So particles bigger and / or smaller than MPPS are filtered with higher efficiency rates. Filters for EN779 are rated at particle size 0,4 µm because this particle size is reflecting the most given size spectrum for naturally generated particles. Nowardays the unnatural particles in smaller size generated by diesel engines etc. dominate in the overall spec.

 

Filtration efficiency & Classification of Filters

Due to various precipitation efficiencies and areas of application, diverse testing methods are being applied to different filter:

 

Filter Class EN 779Average Arrestance A (%) Example Particle
Size
G1          A < 65   Hair 20 - 200 μm
G2  65 < A < 80   
G3  80 < A < 90     
G4  90 < A   Pollen   10 - 100 μm

 

 Filter Class EN 779 Average Efficiency(%) Example Particle
Size
M5 40 < E < 60  Pollen  10 - 100 μm
M6 60 < E < 80  Spores 10 - 25 μm
F7 80 < E < 90 / M.E.: 35%  Toner 5 - 20 μm
F8 90 < E < 95 / M.E.: 55 %    
F9 95 < E         / M.E.: 70 %    

 

Filter Class EN 1822 Integral Efficiency MPPS
Example Particle
Size
E10 85 < h  Toner 5 - 20 μm
E11 95 < h  Oilfog 0,3 - 5 μm
E12 99,5 < h  Bacteria 0,2 - 25 μm
H13 99,95 < h  Tobacco smoke 0,01 - 1 μm
H14 99,995 < h    

 

Filter Class EN 1822
Integral Efficiency MPPSExample Particle
Size
U15 99,9995 < h  Tobacco smoke 0,01 - 1 μm
U16 99,99995 < h  Virus 0,002 - 0,05 μm 
U17 99,999995 < h    

Measurement Methods for Particulate Air Filters: ISO 29463 vs. ISO 14644-3

 

The classification of particulate air filters is primarily based on the now mostly obsolete EN 1822, except for part 1, and the nearly identical ISO 29463. Often, an additional test according to ISO 14644-3 is carried out at customer sites. The structure and type of these two test methods, and why they can lead to different results in practice, are explained below. 

First, it should be noted that only EN 1822 or ISO 29463 allows for the classification of a filter element. While the leak test according to ISO 14644-3 only provides information about whether a filter is airtight or not, the tests according to the other standards allow classification into filter classes from E10 to U17.

Scan Test According to ISO 29463

Conclusion: The results are highly precise and reproducible, as environmental variables are practically excluded.

 

Leak Test According to ISO 14644-3

 

 

 

 

Conclusion: The accuracy of the leak test according to ISO 14644-3 is limited by the variable field conditions and the indirect nature of the measurement. However, it provides a realistic assessment of filter performance in the actual application environment.

 

Summary of Accuracy Comparison

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