Introduction to the Filters
Table of Contents
- HEPA Filters: Originally developed during the 1940s Manhattan Project to capture radioactive contaminants, HEPA filters are the global standard for high-efficiency air purification. They are standardized to trap 99.97%of particles as small as 0.3µm.
- ULPA Filters: Designed to surpass the limits of HEPA technology, ULPA filters feature significantly tighter fiber networks and smaller pore sizes. They are rated to trap 99.999% of particles as small as 0.12 µm.
Direct Comparison

The critical trade-offs between HEPA and ULPA filtration systems are outlined below:
| Feature | HEPA Filters | ULPA Filters |
| Efficiency Rating | 99.97%efficiency | 99.999%efficiency |
| Target Particle Size | 0.3 µm (Most Penetrating Particle Size) | 0.12 µm or larger |
| Airflow Resistance | Lower static pressure drops | 20 % to 50 % higher static pressure drop |
| Airflow Capacity | 20% to 50 % higher capacity than ULPA | Reduced airflow due to dense media |
| Average Lifespan | Shorter operational life (5-8 years) | Shorter operational life (5-8) years) |
| Cost Profile | Economical upfront and operational costs | (approx. 35%) higher premium upfront + high energy use |
| Cleanroom Standard | Typically deployed in ISO Class 5 to 8 | Mandated for ultra-clean ISO Class 3 and 4 |
Keynotes and Core Insights
1. The Myth of the 0.3 µm Limit
It is a common misconception that HEPA filters cannot trap particles smaller than 0.3 µm. In physics, 0.3 µm is designated as the Most Penetrating Particle Size (MPPS).
- Particles larger than 0.3 µm are easily stopped by direct physical collision (impaction and interception).
- Particles smaller than 0.1 µm travel along erratic paths (Brownian motion) and become trapped by diffusion.
- The 0.3 µm size is the hardest to catch, which is why it serves as the baseline test for filter efficiency.
2. Airflow vs. Purity Trade-off
Because ULPA filter material is exceptionally dense, it acts as a severe bottleneck to air circulation. Swapping a HEPA filter for an ULPA filter without altering the machine will choke the system. To achieve the same number of Air Changes per Hour (ACH) as a HEPA system, an ULPA system requires significantly more massive filter surface areas, bigger blower fans, and higher energy consumption.
3. Distinct Application Pathways
- HEPA Environments: Ideal for places where high air volumes and structural protection matter most. Examples include hospitals, commercial building HVAC systems, isolation wards, pharmaceutical formulation, and standard laboratories.
- ULPA Environments: Reserved exclusively for ultra-sensitive processes where a single sub-micron speck could ruin a product worth a million. Examples include semiconductor fabrication, microelectronics manufacturing, and advanced nanotechnology research.
Further Readings
- https://encompasscleanrooms.com/blog/ulpa-vs-hepa-filters-for-cleanrooms
- https://www.14644.dk/hepa-and-ulpa-filters-critical-technologies-in-cleanroom-environments
- https://www.filtersales.com/blog/hepa-vs-ulpa/
- https://moduluscleanrooms.com/ulpa-vs-hepa/
- https://unicornlifescience.com/ar/hepa-vs-ulpa-filters-biosafety/
- https://vietnamcleanroom.com/en/post/hepa-filters-and-ulpa-filters-comparison-644.htm
- https://www.labmanager.com/high-efficiency-filtration-the-role-of-hepa-and-ulpa-filters-in-lab-safety-33870
- https://www.labkafe.com/blog/hepa-and-ulpa-filters-in-lab-equipment-whats-the-difference/
- https://www.liberty-ind.com/blog/hepa-vs-ulpa-filters/
- https://www.airsystems-inc.com/resources/blog/filters/hepa-ulpa-filtration-difference/?srsltid=AfmBOoqq0m086mZ7H5CFiiRzns0vQpVmfoWQNThSs_3mm8IAyOZAW0-b
- https://www.scribd.com/document/391477323/11-HEPA-and-ULPA-Filters
- https://www.scribd.com/document/545878927/HEPA-Filters-and-ULPA-Filters
- https://eoleaf.com/pages/how-do-hepa-filters-work