ISO 5 definition

ISO 5 means air containing no more than 100 particles per cubic foot of air of a size at least 0.5 micron or larger in diameter (3520 particles per cubic meter).
ISO 5 means air containing no more than 100 particles per cubic foot of air of a size at least

Examples of ISO 5 in a sentence

  • All open manipulations will occur within the ISO 5 area (Grade A BSC) located within an ISO 7 in-operation (Grade B) suite adjacent to the main processing room.

  • Customer acknowledges that Customer Equipment is validated in an ISO 5, multi-use area and will require significant lead time to coordinate any access to equipment.

  • REQ-030796/A All the components of the CL-DFM system that would stay inside the Vaccum chamber shall be cleaned and packaged in a clean room ISO REQ-030797/A REQ-030798/A 6, preferably ISO 5 according to ČSN EN ISO 14644 (or equivalent, e.g. EN ISO 14644).

Related to ISO 5

  • ISO-NE means ISO New England, Inc. or any successor entity.

  • ISO means any Option intended to be and designated as an incentive stock option within the meaning of Section 422 of the Code.

  • CAISO Grid means the system of transmission lines and associated facilities of the Participating Transmission Owners that have been placed under the CAISO’s operational control.

  • ISO Tariff means the ISO New England Inc. Transmission, Markets and Services Tariff, FERC Electric Tariff No. 3, as amended, modified, superseded and supplemented from time to time, and including the Market Rules and Procedures.

  • ISO-NE Rules means all rules and procedures adopted by NEPOOL, ISO-NE, or the RTO, and governing wholesale power markets and transmission in New England, as such rules may be amended from time to time, including but not limited to, the ISO-NE Tariff, the ISO-NE Operating Procedures (as defined in the ISO-NE Tariff), the ISO-NE Planning Procedures (as defined in the ISO-NE Tariff), the Transmission Operating Agreement (as defined in the ISO-NE Tariff), the Participants Agreement, the manuals, procedures and business process documents published by ISO-NE via its web site and/or by its e-mail distribution to appropriate NEPOOL participants and/or NEPOOL committees, as amended, superseded or restated from time to time.