Maintaining a sterile environment in a cleanroom or pharmaceutical laboratory is one of the most significant operational expenses a facility faces.
For decades, traditional manual sanitization, the spray and wipe method, has been the standard.
However, as compliance requirements like USP 797 and ISO 14644 become stricter, many facility managers are looking at DryFog technology.
Beyond the initial purchase price of equipment, the real question is: which method costs less over a fiscal year?
The Hidden Costs of Traditional Sanitization
Traditional sanitization relies heavily on manual labor and the application of liquid chemicals.
While the upfront cost of a bottle of disinfectant and a microfiber mop is low, the operational costs tell a different story.
1) High Labor Requirements
Manual cleaning is incredibly slow. To properly decontaminate a 1,000-square-foot cleanroom, staff must wipe every surface, including walls, ceilings, and under-table ledges.

This requires multiple technicians and several hours of work.
2) Human Error and Re-Cleaning
Human error is the leading cause of contamination. If a technician misses a corner or fails to follow the correct disinfectant dwell time, the room may fail a microbial test.

The cost of failing an audit or having to re-clean a room can double the labor expense instantly.
3) Excessive Chemical Waste
Manual spraying often results in over-wetting. Large amounts of chemicals are used to ensure coverage, much of which ends up pooled on the floor or wasted on wipes.

Over time, these chemicals can degrade sensitive laboratory equipment and stainless steel surfaces, leading to premature replacement costs.
How DryFog Technology Changes the Financial Equation
DryFog systems, such as the DF2S or DF4S, use compressed air to atomize liquid disinfectants (usually hydrogen peroxide-based) into ultra-fine droplets, typically between 1 and 10 microns in size.
Minimal Labor Involvement
Unlike manual cleaning, DryFog is a set it and forget it process. A technician positions the fogger, sets the timer, and leaves the room.

This frees up staff to focus on higher-value tasks while the room decontaminates itself. For a large facility, this reduction in man-hours can save tens of thousands of dollars annually.
100% Surface Coverage
Because the fog behaves like a gas, it fills the entire volume of the room. It penetrates areas that human hands cannot reach inside HVAC vents, behind heavy machinery, and into microscopic floor cracks.

This level of consistency nearly eliminates the risk of hot spots and failed microbial samples.
Reduced Chemical Consumption
DryFog technology is remarkably efficient. Because the droplets are so small, they provide a massive surface area for decontamination using a fraction of the liquid required by a spray bottle.

Facilities often report using 80% less chemical solution compared to manual methods.
Comparison: Labor, Chemicals, and Downtime
| Feature | Traditional Sanitization | DryFog Decontamination |
|---|---|---|
| Labor Cost | High (multiple staff required) | Low (automated process) |
| Downtime | Extensive (manual drying and venting) | Optimized (rapid dispersion and evaporation) |
| Chemical Usage | High (heavy liquid application) | Low (efficient aerosol use) |
| Consistency | Variable (prone to human error) | Uniform (complete room coverage) |
| Equipment Impact | High (risk of corrosion or wetting) | Low (dry vapor is safe for electronics) |

