

Process air impacts product quality, equipment lifetime, and compliance. In controlled industries, air purity is a core requirement, not a nice-to-have.
Compressed air and process gases can carry particles, oil aerosols, microorganisms, and moisture from compressors, pipework, and the surrounding environment. With the right filtration strategy, you remove risk before it reaches critical points in your system.
Sterile air filtration is used when compressed air or gas has direct or indirect product contact. It supports microbiological control in pharmaceutical, food and beverage, biotech, and fermentation processes.
Sterile filters typically use high efficiency membrane technology to retain microorganisms while keeping airflow stable and pressure drop under control.
Sterile filtration reduces contamination risk and supports audit readiness for strict frameworks such as GMP and HACCP.
Steam is widely used for sterilization, heating, and cleaning. Even at high temperature, steam can carry rust, scale, and pipe debris from boilers and distribution lines.
Steam filtration removes these impurities before steam reaches critical equipment or sterile barriers. This improves reliability and protects downstream components.
Particle filtration is the foundation of compressed air treatment. It removes dust, rust, and oil aerosols before air reaches sensitive applications or final sterile filtration.
Many systems use staged filtration, such as pre filtration, fine filtration, and coalescing filtration, depending on the required air quality.
Good particle filtration protects pneumatic equipment, reduces pressure losses, and extends the service life of downstream filters.
The right filtration setup improves both quality and uptime. You reduce the risk of contamination, avoid unnecessary wear, and get more predictable production conditions.