In the 2026 Malaysian high-tech manufacturing sector—specifically for Aseptic Filling (Grade A) and Sub-7nm Semiconductor Fabs—ULPA (Ultra-Low Particulate Air) filters are the standard. Unlike HEPA, ULPA filters capture 99.999% of particles at 0.1 microns. At this level of cleanliness, Airflow Velocity Testing is the most critical metric for maintaining Laminar (Unidirectional) Flow, which prevents "Particle Stagnation" and cross-contamination.
Under ISO 14644-3:2026 and DOSH safety guidelines, velocity testing ensures that the "Air Piston" moving through your cleanroom is uniform and capable of sweeping contaminants away from the work surface.
For an ISO Class 1 to 5 environment, the air must move in a unidirectional downward or horizontal pattern.
Standard Setpoint: The industry benchmark is 0.45 meters per second (approx. 90 feet per minute).
Tolerance Window: 2026 standards allow for a deviation of plus or minus 20%. This means the velocity at any given point should stay between 0.36 m/s and 0.54 m/s.
Uniformity Requirement: The relative standard deviation between all sampling points across a filter bank should ideally be less than 15%. If one ULPA filter is blowing harder than its neighbor, it creates Turbulence (Eddy Currents) that traps contamination.
We don't just take one reading. To satisfy a 2026 NPRA or DOSH audit, we perform a systematic grid test:
Measurement Plane: Readings are taken at the "Work Plane" (typically 150mm to 300mm below the filter face) or at the filter face itself, depending on the protocol.
Calibrated Anemometry: We use high-precision Thermal (Hot-Wire) Anemometers or Ultrasonic Anemometers. These are sensitive enough to detect the slight "wavering" of air that a standard vane anemometer might miss.
Point Density: For a standard 2x4 foot ULPA filter, we typically measure at 4 to 6 points to ensure the entire media pack is performing uniformly.
Under the Energy Efficiency and Conservation Act (EECA) 2026, over-ventilating is as much of a compliance failure as under-ventilating.
Precision Fan Speed: We use Variable Frequency Drives (VFDs) to "Dial-In" the exact 0.45 m/s velocity.
The Cube Law Advantage: Airflow velocity is directly proportional to fan speed. Following the Cube Law, if your cleanroom is currently over-performing at 0.55 m/s and we use the VFD to drop it to the target 0.45 m/s (an 18% reduction), your fan's energy consumption drops by nearly 45%.
Automated Compensation: We link the velocity sensors to the VFD. As the ULPA filter loads with dust and resistance increases, the VFD automatically ramps up the fan to keep the velocity at a constant 0.45 m/s.
High-velocity ULPA systems are prone to mechanical "Buffeting." We use Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) analysis to protect the installation:
Resonance Fingerprinting: If a fan is running at a frequency that matches the ceiling grid's natural resonance, the ULPA filters will vibrate. This vibration disrupts the laminar air stream, turning it turbulent.
VFD Frequency Skipping: We program the VFD to "skip" any RPM range that causes harmonic vibration, ensuring the air leaves the filter in a perfectly straight, quiet, and predictable "piston."
34 Years of Engineering Depth: Based in KL, we have the specialized tools and experience to validate Malaysia’s most sensitive cleanrooms.
Audit-Ready Reports: We provide the Velocity Mapping, Uniformity Certificates, and Energy ROI data required for your 2026 regulatory submissions.
Turnkey Calibration: If your velocities are out of spec, we don't just report it—we recalibrate your VFDs and BMS logic on-site to fix it.
Malaysia