When comparing cleanroom products that impact quality, compliance, and operational performance, one of the first steps is reviewing technical data sheets. These documents should give a clear sense of whether or not a product meets or exceeds specific process and cleanroom requirements.
Simple, right?
Well…not quite.
What can initially seem like an apples-to-apples comparison often turns into a confusing mix of inconsistent metrics, test methods, and fine print. Why? Because not all technical data sheets speak the same language. Even when they use similar terms, they don’t always mean the same thing.
While each manufacturer has their own distinct format, most cleanroom consumable data sheets include information in three broad categories:
Identifying these categories is the easy part. The real challenge lies in how the data is presented and interpreted.
When evaluating or comparing cleanroom consumables, one of the most important things to understand is the difference between Typical Published Values (TPVs) and Product Specifications (SPECs).
Here’s the breakdown:
What does this mean?
A TPV from one manufacturer cannot be compared directly to a SPEC from another. They're fundamentally different types of data. While some manufacturers provide both TPVs and SPECs on products, understanding the difference between them is critically important.
At first glance, a SPEC may look "worse" than a TPV because it defines the lowest (or highest) acceptable limit on a specific attribute. But in reality, SPECs provide a guaranteed and transparent performance measure on a product. TPVs, by contrast, only represent averages.
While TPVs can provide meaningful data, understanding how manufacturers calculate a TPV is also critical in making informed product evaluations. Often, manufacturers don’t readily disclose all the necessary information.
Key questions to ask about TPVs:
At Valutek, TPVs are based on averages from actual 36-month lot data and updated on a rolling basis. While most manufacturers have different methods for establishing TPVs, many do not readily provide context, methodology, and validation.
Even when comparing TPVs to TPVs or SPECs to SPECs, it’s important to be careful about how numbers are measured and reported. The devil is in the details when it comes to the test methods and units of measurement reported on data sheets for cleanroom gloves, wipers, and apparel.
While industry standard test methods (like those defined by IEST, ASTM, and the ESD Association) are widely recognized and accepted, some manufacturers use “internal test methods” instead of these public and reproduceable standards.
That’s like reading a food label that says, “Calories measured using proprietary methods.” You wouldn't trust that for nutrition, and you shouldn’t for cleanroom products either.
A test that mimics one outlined in IEST-RP-CC004.3 (Evaluating Wiping Materials Used in Cleanrooms) may sound credible, but unless it’s the exact test, the numbers may not hold up in a true comparison.
Even slight differences in measurement units can also result in major product misunderstandings.
For example, one product manufacturer might report out on Liquid Particle Counts (LPC) per cm², while another reports per m². Without checking the fine print, your comparison is off by a factor of 10,000. The same can be true with other measurements. Are you evaluating in grams and meters or pounds and feet?
If units aren’t consistent, comparisons are meaningless.
Too often, technical data sheets bury critical details in the footnotes, rely on inconsistent test methods and units of measure, or substitute TPVs for actual product specifications. This confusion makes it harder to compare and select the right critical products for unique cleanroom environments.
To simplify the process and make more confident product decisions, follow this simple 3-step checklist:
Manufacturing SPECs
36-month trending data
Certificates of Analysis (COAs) for recent lots
Valutek is one of the few manufacturers that openly provides:
This isn’t just transparency. It’s commitment to consistency.
Because when reviewing cleanroom consumables, building SOPs, validating processes, or auditing suppliers, what really matters is lot-to-lot reliability and repeatable performance.
Valutek gives you the full picture.
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Critical Applications Require Repeatable, Standardized Testing