Goodway BPV-125-10 Industrial HEPA Vacuum Cleaners Installation Guide
- June 13, 2024
- goodway
Table of Contents
BPV-125-10 Industrial HEPA Vacuum Cleaners
Goodway Buying Guide
HEPA FILTER
What Is a HEPA filter?
OSHA defines a High-Efficiency Particulate Air (HEPA) filter that can remove
particles with a diameter of at least 0.3 micrometers at 99.97% efficiency.
Microscopically small particles, such as dust mites and other airborne
particles that can be hazardous or
cause health problems in the environment, can be captured by HEPA filters.
What is a HEPA Filter Vacuum?
Goodway offers a wide selection of Industrial HEPA Vacuum Cleaners. HEPA
industrial vacuum systems offer incredible filtration performance and can be
configured to meet pretty much any cleaning requirement. These HEPA filter
vacuums are perfect to use for the cleanup of sensitive areas, where small
particle filtering is required. Examples include lead dust particles, silica
dust cleanup, allergens, fine specks of dust, and more.
Use this guide to find out if a HEPA filter vacuum is right for you.
DID YOU KNOW?
As the last filtration step, a HEPA vacuum cleaner uses a highefficiency
particulate air (HEPA) filter. HEPA filters can capture particles as small as
0.3 microns with a 99.97% efficiency rate. A micron, or “micrometer,” is equal
to 0.00004 inches.
Why Are HEPA Filters Important?
The quality of HEPA filters matters. There are several reasons why HEPA
filters are used, including preventing allergy-causing particles and bacteria,
controlling allergens in hospitals and laboratories, and even accommodating
bioterrorism agents in industrial plants. HEPA vacuum cleaners effectively
improve indoor air quality by removing debris from the air and reducing
harmful contaminants. When maintaining a high standard of indoor air quality
(IAQ) is paramount, HEPA filters are most often recommended. Indoor air
quality is increasingly prioritized in commercial buildings because poor air
quality negatively impacts allergy sufferers, asthmatics, and other
respiratory patients.
Most of the time, vacuum cleaners collect dust, dander, and pollen from
surfaces being cleaned, but they also add more small particles to the air,
which people are exposed to. HEPA vacuum cleaners capture these tiny particles
that get kicked back into the air to keep the air clean.
DID YOU KNOW?
HEPA filters are made up of a mat-like material with fibers. The fibers must
be arranged precisely so that particles stick to the fibers in one of three
ways, according to IAQSource.com:
- I nterception: this is the first line of defense, where most particles in the airflow stream naturally adhere to the fibers.
- Impaction: this is the second line of defense, where the particles that are too large for interception are trapped in the curved contours of the fibers.
- Diffusion: this is the final defense, which traps molecules that are too small for either interception or impaction by forcing them to collide with gas molecules.
Where to use HEPA Filters Vacuums:
- Hospitals
- Laboratories
- Asbestos removal
True HEPA vs. HEPA Type?
The Underwriters Laboratories safety standard is a benchmark for HEPA filter
performance. When a HEPA Filter passes the UL test, an air purifier or
filtration system can be granted its mark (typically letters “UL” in a
circle).
True HEPA: To be deemed a True HEPA filter, the filters must remove 99.97
percent of all particles of 0.3 microns in size.
There is no other label that has any real meaning other than True HEPA (or
sometimes Absolute HEPA), as it is the only one that claims to adhere to a
standard. Goodway HEPA Filter Vacuums have been tested and certified.
HEPA Type/Like: Essentially, a HEPA Type/Like Filter is meaningless because it
does not comply with any standard.
Since it has not been tested either, it will perform nearly as well as a HEPA
filter or ineffective.
HOW TO CHOOSE THE RIGHT HEPA FILTER VACUUM?
To start, you need to identify when to use a HEPA filter Vacuum:
-
Lead paint – To comply with EPA rules when working with lead paint, you must use a HEPA vacuum to clean any walls or other surfaces covered in dust.
-
Asbestos – To prevent fine particles or powder from escaping into the atmosphere and posing possible health hazards, any material that contains or might contain asbestos must be cleaned with a HEPA-filtered vacuum system before a renovation, repair,
or replacement. -
Clean environments – An environment where immaculate, dust-free conditions are necessary, such as one where delicate electronic gear or optical/photo equipment is present. Another excellent place for HEPA vacuums is on the production floor of a
food or pharmaceutical company. -
Biological contamination – Since HEPA vacuums capture so much dust, they could be the best cleaning solution after a vermin, bird, or creature infestation. The use of a HEPA vacuum is also standard to remove any mold or mildew.
-
Nuclear Power – Places where radioactive materials must be cleaned up, such as power plants, laboratories, and hospitals, are perfect for HEPA vacuum cleaners.
Next, you need to identify the types of HEPA filter Vacuums available:
- Industrial
- Portable
- Wet/Dry
- Wall Mounted
- Continuous Duty
- HEPA with Hazardous Material
- Attachable Accessories
DID YOU KNOW?
High-Efficiency Particulate Air (HEPA) filters have evolved from equipment
with specialized uses to a product used in hundreds of applications worldwide
in the past 50 years. It originally was used in the Manhattan Project to clean
the air in cleanrooms
where the world’s first atomic bomb was made, but it now is used for items as
diverse as asbestos abatement and lead-based paint removal to general cleanup
and even home-owner use.
GOODWAY TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION
420 West Avenue, Stamford, CT 06902-6384 U.S.A.
Call Us Today: 1-800-333-7467
Fax: 203-359-9601
goodway@goodway.com
www.goodway.com
References
- Discount Filters | Air & Water Filters For Your Home
- HVAC Facility & Plant Maintenance Tools | Goodway
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