Risks that are posed by the presence of excessive particulate levels or concentrations of harmful gases
include damage that might cause the device to malfunction or cease functioning altogether. This
specification sets forth limits for particulates and gases that are intended to avoid such damage. The limits
must not be viewed or used as definitive limits, because numerous other factors, such as temperature or
moisture content of the air, can influence the impact of particulates or environmental corrosives and gaseous
contaminant transfer. In the absence of specific limits that are set forth in this document, you must
implement practices that maintain particulate and gas levels that are consistent with the protection of human
health and safety. If IBM determines that the levels of particulates or gases in your environment have caused
damage to the device, IBM may condition provision of repair or replacement of devices or parts on
implementation of appropriate remedial measures to mitigate such environmental contamination.
Implementation of such remedial measures is a customer responsibility.
Table 7. Limits for particulates and gases
Contaminant
Limits
Particulate
• The room air must be continuously filtered with 40% atmospheric dust spot efficiency (MERV
9) according to ASHRAE Standard 52.2
1
.
• Air that enters a data center must be filtered to 99.97% efficiency or greater, using high-
efficiency particulate air (HEPA) filters that meet MIL-STD-282.
• The deliquescent relative humidity of the particulate contamination must be more than 60%
2
.
• The room must be free of conductive contamination such as zinc whiskers.
Gaseous
• Copper: Class G1 as per ANSI/ISA 71.04-1985
3
• Silver: Corrosion rate of less than 300 Å in 30 days
1
ASHRAE 52.2-2008 -
Method of Testing General Ventilation Air-Cleaning Devices for Removal Efficiency by
Particle Size
. Atlanta: American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers, Inc.
2
The deliquescent relative humidity of particulate contamination is the relative humidity at which the dust absorbs
enough water to become wet and promote ionic conduction.
3
ANSI/ISA-71.04-1985.
Environmental conditions for process measurement and control systems: Airborne
contaminants
. Instrument Society of America, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, U.S.A.
Documentation format
The publications for this product are in Adobe Portable Document Format (PDF) and should be compliant
with accessibility standards. If you experience difficulties when you use the PDF files and want to request a
web-based format or accessible PDF document for a publication, direct your mail to the following address:
Information Development
IBM Corporation
205/A015
3039 E. Cornwallis Road
P.O. Box 12195
Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27709-2195
U.S.A.
In the request, be sure to include the publication part number and title.
When you send information to IBM, you grant IBM a nonexclusive right to use or distribute the information in
any way it believes appropriate without incurring any obligation to you.
271
Summary of Contents for BladeCenter HS23 1929
Page 1: ...BladeCenter HS23 Blade Server Problem Determination and Service Guide Machine Types 7875 1929 ...
Page 284: ...268 BladeCenter HS23 Blade ServerProblem Determination and Service Guide ...
Page 289: ...Taiwan BSMI RoHS declaration Appendix B Notices 273 ...
Page 290: ...274 BladeCenter HS23 Blade ServerProblem Determination and Service Guide ...
Page 296: ...280 BladeCenter HS23 Blade ServerProblem Determination and Service Guide ...
Page 297: ......
Page 298: ...Part Number 00KC215 Printed in China 1P P N 00KC215 ...
Page 299: ... 1P00KC215 ...