If you're sourcing chemical filters for an advanced fab, suppliers will give you three quotes: Panel / Deep-Pleat / V-Bank. Within V-Bank, you'll see two configurations: 4V and 6V.

Many buyers default to "biggest capacity," only to discover six months later that the fan now consumes 8% more electricity — and over five years that overshoots the filter's own price.

This article reframes the selection question through the TCO (Total Cost of Ownership) lens.

1. The Three Structures at a Glance

Chemical filtration works by giving polluted gas long contact time with activated/impregnated carbon for adsorption. Two metrics are always in tension:

  • Larger contact area → bigger capacity, longer life
  • Faster airflow path → lower pressure drop, less fan energy
StructureDesign LogicContact AreaPressure DropBest For
PanelFlat-pack, simplestSmallLowGeneral HVAC, light load
Deep-PleatFolded media for area gainMediumMediumModerate load, depth-constrained
V-BankV-shape multi-panel arrayLargeMedium-LowHigh load, long life requirement

V-Bank's elegance: using V geometry to stuff multiple panels into one frame, expanding area while distributing airflow across multiple faces — so "area grows, but pressure drop doesn't grow proportionally."

2. 4V vs 6V: What Actually Differs

The "V count" in V-Bank is literal — how many V-shaped panels per frame.

ConfigV CountPanelsRelative AreaRelative ΔPRelative Cost
4V481.0× (baseline)1.0× (baseline)1.0× (baseline)
6V612~1.5×~0.85×~1.3×

Key insight: 6V increases capacity by 50% and lowers pressure drop by 15% — because airflow distributes across more panels, lowering linear velocity per panel.

But 6V costs 30% more upfront and may require deeper installation depth — a problem in legacy plant retrofits.

3. The TCO Math

Consider a chemical filter zone running 24/7, totaled over 5 years:

TCO(5y) = Purchase × Replace Cycles + Fan Energy + Labor + Disposal

Sample calculation for a 610×610×292mm V-Bank chemical filter (illustrative — confirm with supplier):

Item4V6V
Unit cost (USD)$260$340
Capacity (kg activated carbon)1218
Expected life (months)1824
Replacements over 5y3.32.5
5-year purchase cost$858$850
Fan extra energy (5y)+$580 (baseline)+$495 (−15%)
Labor per replacement ($50)$165$125
5-year TCO$1,603$1,470

Conclusion: 6V is 8% cheaper over 5 years, despite a 30% higher unit price.

But this is not a universal answer — the variables that flip it are replacement frequency and electricity rates.

4. When to Pick 4V vs 6V

Pick 4V when:

  • Installation depth is limited (<290mm)
  • One-off project or imminent plant relocation
  • Low pollution load, naturally low replacement frequency
  • Fan energy is small in TCO (non-24/7 operation)

Pick 6V when:

  • 24/7 continuous operation in advanced process
  • High chemical load (EUV photoresist zones, AMC control)
  • Energy-cost sensitive (approaching contracted demand limit)
  • Budget priority is 5-year TCO, not upfront price

Pick Panel / Deep-Pleat when:

  • Low-load environment (offices, general HVAC)
  • Small capacity, infrequent replacement
  • Installation depth only 100–150mm

5. Three Common Selection Pitfalls

Pitfall 1: Comparing Only "Carbon Weight"

More carbon ≠ more adsorption. Impregnated carbon can adsorb 5–10× more of specific target gases than plain activated carbon. For acid gases (HCl, SO₂), use K₂CO₃-impregnated; for amines (NH₃), use phosphoric-acid-impregnated. Ask the supplier about "breakthrough time for my target gas" — far more meaningful than "kilograms of carbon."

Pitfall 2: Ignoring MAU vs RC Differences

Chemical filters in MAU (Make-Up Air) vs RC (Recirculation) follow different logic:

  • MAU: must defend against outdoor pollution spikes — prioritize capacity — 6V fits
  • RC: high airflow, low pollution concentration — prioritize pressure drop — 4V or Deep-Pleat suffices

Pitfall 3: Reading Only "Initial" Pressure Drop

Chemical filter pressure drop rises slowly with adsorbed mass (unlike particulate filters' steep curve), but you must define "final pressure drop" — typically 1.5× initial. TCO must use average pressure drop, not initial.

6. Procurement Engineer Checklist

Before placing an order, ask the supplier these 5 questions:

  1. 1What is the breakthrough time for my target gas (give specific names: HCl / NH₃ / TMAH / NMP / Boron)?
  2. 2What are the initial vs final pressure drop, and recommended final value?
  3. 3What impregnation chemistry, and which gases does it target?
  4. 4Frame material, sealing method (gel / silicone / knife-edge)?
  5. 5Can you provide samples for on-site AMC sampling?

Put answers in your comparison sheet and you won't be misled by single-metric "high capacity" claims.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: 6V has 50% more capacity than 4V — does that directly extend replacement cycle by 50%?

A: In theory yes; in practice, with discount. Real life is affected by target gas concentration variability, temperature/humidity, competitive adsorption. Conservative estimate: 6V life is 30–40% longer than 4V.

Q: When chemical filter saturates, does it release adsorbed gas back?

A: Yes — called re-emission. When downstream gas concentration drops below adsorbed concentration, physically adsorbed gas releases slowly. Replace before full saturation — even if pressure drop hasn't hit threshold, replace if past recommended cycle.

Q: Can V-Bank chemical filters be installed in series with HEPA?

A: Yes and commonly done. Typical advanced AMC control sequence: particle pre-filter → chemical V-Bank → HEPA H14. Chemical filter sits upstream of HEPA to prevent organic gas contamination of HEPA adhesives.

Q: Can chemical filters be regenerated for reuse?

A: A few brands (e.g., YESIANG) offer regeneration services — media returned to factory for high-temp desorption + re-impregnation. DIY heating regeneration is not viable — it destroys the impregnation layer. Ask suppliers if they offer regeneration as a sustainability option.

Q: My plant has only 4V depth available, but budget allows 6V capacity — what now?

A: Consider Deep-Pleat + higher replacement frequency, or add activated carbon pre-filter upstream. Don't force 6V into insufficient depth — it constrains V geometry, spikes pressure drop, and reduces capacity.