Air Filters for Data Centres — EN-Certified F9, G4 and HEPA Filters in South Africa
Data centre uptime depends on clean air, not just cooling. Dust fouls heat sinks and causes servers to overheat. In the Johannesburg and Pretoria corridor, industrial air pollution adds another risk — gaseous contamination that corrodes circuit boards over time and can void equipment warranties. Different zones in a data centre need different filtration. The server hall, UPS rooms, cooling plant, and fresh air intakes each have their own requirements. We supply the full range — G4 pre-filters, F7 and F9 secondary filters, V-Bank filters for space-constrained cooling units, and HEPA for critical zones.
Filtration by Data Centre Zone
Server halls (IT white space) — The most important zone to get right. G4 pre-filtration at the AHU inlet, then F7 secondary as the industry standard. Facilities using airside economisers (drawing outside air directly) should upgrade to F9 secondary.
UPS rooms and electrical switchgear — G4 pre-filtration and F7 secondary. Battery rooms may also need activated carbon filtration where off-gassing is a concern.
Cooling plant rooms (chillers, CRACs, AHUs) — G4 on fresh air intakes, F7 on supply air. V-Bank filters are a good fit for CRAC and CRAH units where space is tight and energy efficiency matters.
Fresh air intakes — The first line of defence. G4 pre-filters catch the coarse particulate before it reaches any downstream equipment. In high-pollution areas around Johannesburg, this stage works hardest and needs replacing most often.
Critical environments (hyperscale) — G4 + F9 + HEPA terminal filtration for facilities targeting the cleanest possible air.
Why Air Quality Matters More in Johannesburg
Most of South Africa's data centre capacity sits in the Johannesburg-Pretoria corridor — and that is also one of the country's most polluted industrial zones. Sulphur dioxide from coal-fired power stations and industrial emissions creates a gaseous contamination risk that does not exist in coastal locations like Cape Town.
This matters because gaseous contamination corrodes the copper and silver traces on circuit boards. Major server manufacturers have warranty clauses that require air quality to meet certain standards. If your facility's air quality falls outside those limits, equipment failures may not be covered.
Particulate filtration (G4 + F7/F9) handles the dust. Gaseous contamination requires molecular filtration — activated carbon or permanganate media. If you are operating in an industrial area and are unsure about your gaseous contamination risk, contact us for guidance.
Replacement Intervals
G4 pre-filters — typically every 3 months. Replace when the pressure drop across the filter reaches roughly double the clean reading.
F7 / F9 secondary filters — every 6 to 12 months depending on the dust load.
V-Bank filters — longer service life than pocket filters at the same grade due to the larger media area. Monitor pressure drop rather than replacing on a fixed calendar.
The best approach is pressure-drop monitoring rather than calendar-based replacement.
ASHRAE TC 9.9 Filter Recommendations
| ASHRAE TC 9.9 Level | EN779 Grade | Typical Application |
|---|---|---|
| A1 (baseline) | G4 | Pre-filtration for all SA data centres |
| A2 (standard) | F7 | Secondary stage — commercial DCs |
| A3 (enhanced) | F9 | Enterprise / co-location facilities |
| A4 (superior) | H13 | Hyperscale / ISO 14644-1 Class 8 |
Recommended Products
V-Bank Filters
110 Pa initial. Low energy cost. 592×592×292mm.
View → G4 · EN779Panel Filters
AHU pre-filtration. 595×595×48mm.
View → H14 · EN1822HEPA Filters
≥99.995%. EN1822 certs for ISO Class 8.
View → F9 · EN779Pocket / Bag Filters
Secondary filtration for server halls with airside economisers.
View →Specifying filters for a SA data centre?
We can confirm ASHRAE-compliant grades and supply from local stock.