In 2026, the service requirements for HEPA (High-Efficiency Particulate Air) and ULPA (Ultra-Low Penetration Air) filters have diverged significantly due to the Energy Efficiency and Conservation Act (EECA) 2024 and the ISO 14644-3:2024 update. While both require rigorous validation, ULPA service is now characterized by "Extreme Sensitivity" testing, whereas HEPA service focuses on "High-Volume" efficiency.
At EKG M&E, we apply 34 years of technical depth to manage these distinct lifecycles, ensuring your facility meets both purity and Building Energy Index (BEI) targets.
The primary driver of the service difference is the particle size they are designed to capture.
| Metric | HEPA Service (H13-H14) | ULPA Service (U15-U17) |
| Efficiency Goal | 99.95% to 99.995% | 99.9995% to 99.999995% |
| Reference Particle | 0.3 microns (Bacteria/Viruses) | 0.1 to 0.12 microns (Ultrafine Dust) |
| Common ISO Class | ISO 5 to ISO 8 | ISO 1 to ISO 4 |
| Initial Resistance | 250 Pascal | 350+ Pascal |
| Energy Impact | High | Extreme (30-50% higher than HEPA) |
The way we verify the integrity of these filters during a 2026 service call is fundamentally different.
HEPA Service (Photometry): We typically use an Aerosol Photometer. We inject a high concentration of PAO (Polyalphaolefin) smoke upstream and scan the face for any leak exceeding 0.01%. This is a mass-based measurement.
ULPA Service (Discrete Particle Counting): Because ULPA is too efficient for "smoke" (which would clog the fine pores), we use Discrete Particle Counters (DPC). We count individual particles at the 0.1-micron level. The leak threshold is much stricter, often as low as 0.001% or 0.0001%.
Under the 2026 EECA guidelines, we use Condition-Based Monitoring rather than simple calendar dates.
HEPA Lifespan: Typically 7 to 10 years in a well-maintained office or general pharma lab. Service focuses on pre-filter hygiene to extend the main HEPA's life.
ULPA Lifespan: Typically 5 to 8 years. Because the media is 20-30% denser, it "loads" with dust faster. Service is more frequent (every 6 months for ISO 1-5) to prevent the Energy Penalty from spiking your BEI.
The most critical part of a 2026 service visit is the Variable Frequency Drive (VFD) recalibration.
The Challenge: ULPA filters create much higher backpressure. If your fan runs at a constant speed, your energy bills will be astronomical.
The Solution: We use the VFD to maintain a constant face velocity of 0.45 meters per second.
The Cube Law Advantage: Following the Cube Law, if our service team can optimize your system to run at an 80% fan speed instead of 100%, your electricity draw drops by nearly 50%. For ULPA systems, this optimization often pays for the service cost within 12 months.
ULPA filters are far more fragile than HEPA. During service, we perform Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) analysis:
Resonance Identification: We check if the AHU fan is vibrating at a frequency that matches the ceiling grid.
Harmonic Protection: Vibration in an ULPA system causes "Media Shedding," where the filter itself creates dust. We program the VFD to "skip" these harmonic frequencies, preserving the filter’s 99.9999% integrity.
34 Years of Engineering Depth: Based in KL, we understand the specific humidity and thermal challenges of the Malaysian climate.
Audit-Ready Documentation: We provide the ISO 14644-3 Certificates, PAO/DPC Leak Maps, and EECA-compliant Energy Reports.
Turnkey Support: From Cleanroom Particle Audits to VFD/BMS Integration.
Malaysia