Operator Safety · Regulatory Compliance · Energy Efficiency
In laboratory safety system design, filtration and extraction are frequently mentioned together — as if they were interchangeable. They are not. And this confusion can have direct consequences on operator safety.
What a Filtration System Actually Does
A filtration system processes air: it passes it through one or more filter media (activated carbon, HEPA, individually or combined) to capture a portion of the pollutants before releasing the air — sometimes back into the room via recirculation. This technology is relevant in specific contexts: no duct network available, mobile workstations, or architectural constraints.
But filtration has structural limitations that extraction does not.
What an Extraction System Does — and What It Guarantees
Extraction removes pollutants from the room at the source. Contaminated air is captured at the point of emission — at the fume hood, canopy hood, or suction station — and exhausted outside the building through a ductwork system.
It is the only approach that:
- Eliminates pollutants rather than temporarily retaining them.
- Performs independently of the nature and concentration of pollutants A filter can be saturated with no visible indication.
- Can be monitored and measured Face velocity, airflow rate, alarms — all auditable parameters under standard EN 14175 and INRS guide ED 795.
- Integrates into a building-wide air quality management strategy Via BMS/BAS systems (BACnet/Modbus protocols).
Filtration Is Not an Alternative to Extraction: It Is a Complement in Specific Cases
An activated carbon filter has a finite service life. That lifespan depends on the chemicals being handled, their concentrations, and frequency of use. It is difficult to predict and often underestimated under real operating conditions. Once saturated, the filter no longer captures contaminants — and the operator has no visible indication of this failure.
Extraction does not have this problem. The extracted airflow is measurable, verifiable, and certifiable. A flow deficiency triggers an alarm. A variable airflow system such as the L.Solution range continuously adjusts extraction to the actual sash position, ensuring the target face velocity is maintained at all times.
What the Regulations Say
The INRS guide ED 795 is explicit on the hierarchy of protective measures: source capture with outdoor extraction remains the reference solution for laboratories handling chemical substances.
In Summary
Filtration can address specific constraints. Extraction meets the safety requirement.
- For any laboratory handling volatile, corrosive, or hazardous chemicals, outdoor extraction is the only reliable approach.
- Properly sized, regulated, and monitored, it delivers a measurable level of protection in compliance with applicable standards.
- This has been the core of SEAT Ventilation's expertise for over 40 years.