Core Characteristics of a Mushroom Cleanroom
1. Air Quality and Filtration
- HEPA filtration: High‑Efficiency Particulate Air filters are essential. They remove dust and microbial spores from incoming air.
- Positive pressure: Keep the room slightly pressurized so that when a door opens, clean air flows outward rather than letting dust in.
- Laminar airflow (optional but ideal): Smooth, directed airflow minimizes turbulence where particles could linger.
2. Surfaces and Materials
- Smooth, non‑porous walls/floors/ceilings: No cracks or crevices where dust or mold can hide. Often vinyl, epoxy, or sealed metal is used.
- Easy‑to‑clean surfaces: Every surface should tolerate regular disinfecting.
3. Entry and Personnel Protocols
- Airlock or entry vestibule: Reduces contamination risk when people enter/exit.
- Protective clothing: Clean suits, gloves, hair covers—basically, a barrier between you and your crop.
- Sticky mats at entry: Trap particles from shoes.
4. Environmental Controls
- Humidity: Mushrooms generally prefer high humidity, but it must be clean and controlled. Mist systems should use filtered, sanitized water.
- Temperature stability: Different mushroom species vary, but consistent temperature is critical.
- Light: Not as crucial as for plants—short exposures of the right spectrum can trigger fruiting, but light is secondary compared to air and humidity.
5. Cleaning and Maintenance
- Routine sterilization protocols: Periodic wipe‑downs with alcohol or other disinfectants; occasionally more aggressive sterilization (like UV or peroxide fogging).
- Restricted traffic: A cleanroom is only as clean as the feet that walk in!