Classification of clean rooms
A universal, international classification of clean rooms has been defined according to the number of particles per unit of volume.
This qualification of a clean room is carried out using a particle counter, which counts the number of particles in a given volume. This will determine the class of the clean room, and the ISO classes range from 1 to 9. For example, a clean room of ISO class 5 contains a maximum of 105, i.e. 100,000 particles per m³.
In addition, according to the definition of the international standard ISO 14644-1, the parameters related to temperature, humidity and pressure must be maintained at a precise level. The most important parameter, however, remains the amount of dust per unit volume.
Ontrack clean rooms
Ontrack is the global data recovery leader and continuously invests in equipment and research & development.
Ontrack has 18 clean rooms around the world and more than 200 data recovery engineers capable of finding a solution in the event of data loss. Our laboratories and clean rooms are approved by major hard drive manufacturers and remain at the cutting edge of technology to guarantee the best possible recovery outcome for each device.
Opening a hard drive requires extensive precautions to avoid dust contamination. It is important not to attempt to repair a hard drive by yourself; even the smallest amount of dust particles could be catastrophic and cause permanent data loss that not even a specialist could recover from.