2025-05-05
In dairy production, adhering to GMP (Good Manufacturing Practice) cleanroom standards for controlling dust particles and microbial contamination is critical. Personnel movement is a primary source of contamination in clean zones, making air showers—"purification checkpoints" for personnel entering clean areas—an essential tool. By using forced airflow and high-efficiency filtration, air showers significantly reduce dust and microbes carried by humans, serving as a core solution for dairy companies to achieve compliant production. Below are four key steps to meet GMP requirements through air showers:
Choose air showers that align with the cleanroom grade (e.g., Class D or higher, common in dairy production) and meet airflow and filtration efficiency standards:
Installation must comply with GMP requirements for differential pressure (10-15 Pa) and airflow direction in clean zones:
Staff compliance directly impacts air shower effectiveness—combine training and protocols:
Establish a regular maintenance schedule to ensure consistent functionality:
Air showers are not standalone solutions but critical nodes in cleanroom management. Dairy enterprises must integrate equipment selection, installation validation, training, and maintenance into their overall GMP framework, combining with environmental monitoring (e.g., settling bacteria tests, particle counting) for closed-loop control. Through standardized air shower processes, companies not only meet cleanroom requirements but also reduce contamination risks at the source, securing the foundation for high-quality dairy production.
Compliance is the cornerstone of quality, and the efficient operation of air showers marks the "first step of purification" for dairy enterprises adhering to GMP.