Silicone lubrication inside controlled environments fails in predictable ways: too much lubricant, the wrong lubricant, or the right lubricant delivered with the wrong handling. The result is often a film you cannot see until it becomes a defect mechanism—sticky particulate capture on seals, transfer to product-contact areas, or residue that complicates inspection and trending. Cleanroom Silsat Silicon-Impregnated Lubricant Wipes, Irradiated are built for controlled, small-area lubrication in aseptic processing and support areas, using an irradiated knit polyester wipe pre-saturated with a 50% medical-grade silicone / 50% isopropyl alcohol (IPA) blend in a resealable pack to reduce open-container variability and over-application.
Operationally, this is not a “wipe down” product. It is a repeatable lubricant delivery tool for gaskets, seals, and interfaces where controlled friction reduction matters and where material traceability and consistent handling help prevent the “we lubricated and created a new contamination problem” outcome.
The Operational Problem It Solves
Lubrication in controlled environments is a balance between function (seal longevity, reduced binding, consistent motion) and contamination control (no unintended transfer, no excess film, no uncontrolled solvents). The most common failure modes this category prevents are:
- Over-application: excess silicone becomes a film, traps particulates, and transfers to adjacent surfaces.
- Handling variability: open bottles, shared reservoirs, and improvised applicators create inconsistent wetness and inconsistent deposition.
- Cross-contamination: reusing a loaded wipe on multiple interfaces spreads soils and defeats traceability.
- Control-state mismatch: using non-controlled consumables in aseptic support workflows adds investigation and audit exposure when trends drift.
What It’s For
Silsat wipes are intended for aseptic processing and support areas to lubricate gaskets and seals in isolators, refrigerators, and cabinets, and for other controlled interfaces where a thin, repeatable silicone film reduces friction and improves seal performance without flooding the area. They are also used in controlled-environment maintenance routines where consistent material control and traceability are required.
Because the wipes are pre-saturated with a silicone/IPA blend, treat them as a targeted application product. For broad-surface cleaning or residue removal, use a wiper and chemistry designed for cleaning rather than lubrication.
Decision Drivers
- Mechanism-first use case: this is lubrication control (thin film, controlled transfer), not general cleaning.
- Pre-saturated blend: 50% medical-grade silicone + 50% IPA supports controlled laydown and fast handling; it also requires wetness discipline to prevent film spread.
- Irradiated control state: minimum irradiation dose 25 kGy supports aseptic support workflows where material control is audited.
- Wiper substrate: knit polyester provides mechanical durability and controlled contact compared with many nonwoven alternatives.
- Resealable, double-bagged packaging: supports staged introduction and reduces “pack left open” contamination risk.
- Traceability: lot and part identification plus irradiation indicators support investigations when a surface condition changes or a seal issue appears.
Materials and Construction: Practical Implications
Substrate: 100% knit polyester. Knit construction is mechanically stable, which matters when you need controlled strokes on gasket lands and seal interfaces without shredding, collapsing, or leaving fibrous debris.
Saturation: 50% medical-grade silicone / 50% IPA. This blend is designed to deliver a thin lubricating film while the IPA component supports rapid handling and helps avoid the “grease glob” effect common with uncontrolled silicone application. The tradeoff is that too much contact time or repeated passes can still spread film beyond the intended zone.
Reality check: no wipe is truly lint-free. The operational goal is low-linting behavior under your actual pressure, stroke count, and surface condition. If you scrub aggressively on sharp edges or rough hardware, any wipe can generate particles.
Compatibility posture: the product is positioned with good compatibility with common disinfectants and cleaning solutions. In practice, the important compatibility question is not “will the wipe survive,” but “will the silicone film interact with my downstream process” (adhesion, coating, sealing, optical inspection, residue methods). Treat silicone as a controlled material in your contamination budget.
Specifications
| Manufacturer Part Number |
SSW6-01IR |
| Wipe Material |
100% knit polyester |
| Saturation |
50% medical-grade silicone / 50% isopropyl alcohol (IPA) |
| Wipe Size |
6 in x 4 in x 0.5 in (15.2 cm x 10 cm x 1.2 cm) |
| Pack Configuration |
8 wipes per resealable pack; each pack double bagged |
| Case Pack |
24 packs per poly-lined case |
| Cleanroom Suitability |
Designed for cleanrooms and controlled environments, ISO 5 to ISO 9 |
| Irradiation Standard |
Minimum irradiation dose 25 kGy; irradiation indicator on each outer bag and each case |
| Autoclavability |
Not autoclavable |
| Shelf Life |
18 months (inclusive of manufacturing date) |
| Traceability Documents |
Certificate of Conformance and Certificate of Irradiation shipped with each order; sterility test results available upon request |
Cleanliness, Safety, and “Do Not Guess” Controls
Flammability and vapor control: the IPA component is a flammable liquid. Use ventilation, ignition-source control, and facility procedures for flammables. Do not stage opened packs near heat sources or in airflow paths that accelerate evaporation.
Silicone is a controlled material: silicone can be a benefit (lubrication, seal performance) and a defect mechanism (film transfer, adhesion interference). Keep Silsat wipes segregated from “silicone-free” workflows, and document where they are allowed.
Typical values vs. specifications: when documentation lists performance as typical, treat it as capability guidance. In validation-sensitive programs, confirm fit using your actual hardware, contact pressure, and acceptance endpoint (visual criteria, functional seal performance, or residue methods as applicable).
Best-Practice Use
- Define the boundary: identify the seal/gasket land and adjacent “no-transfer” surfaces before you touch anything.
- Use light, controlled strokes: treat this as film application, not scrubbing. One-direction strokes reduce film spread.
- Single-use discipline for critical interfaces: if visible soil is present, do not reuse the same wipe area on a second interface.
- Reseal immediately: reseal the inner pack after removing a wipe to reduce evaporation and contamination pickup.
- Control dry-down: allow IPA to flash off before closing enclosures where pooling or wicking is possible.
- Escalate when needed: if the job is residue removal (not lubrication), switch to a cleaning wiper and chemistry designed for removal and verification.
Common Failure Modes—and How to Prevent Them
- Film spread onto adjacent surfaces: prevent with minimal strokes, minimal pressure, and boundary definition before application.
- Particulate capture in an over-lubricated seal: prevent by applying the thinnest effective film and avoiding repeated passes.
- Evaporation-driven inconsistency: prevent by resealing packs promptly and avoiding staging wipes in high airflow.
- Cross-contamination through reuse: prevent with single-use discipline and task-based discard rules.
- Using silicone where silicone is prohibited: prevent with clear SOP boundaries, labeling, and segregation controls.
Where This Product Fits in a Controlled Program
These wipes belong in the maintenance and interface-control layer of a contamination control program—supporting repeatable lubrication of seals and gaskets in controlled environments. They are most effective when paired with (1) defined silicone-use boundaries, (2) controlled staging and resealing discipline, and (3) traceability practices that keep investigations short when equipment performance or surface condition trends change.
Source basis
- SOSCleanroom product page: Cleanroom Silsat Silicon-Impregnated Lubricant Wipes, Irradiated (pack configuration, positioning, documents).
- Micronova Product Specification (Rev. 001): Silsat Wipes, Irradiated (materials, saturation, ISO 5–9 suitability, packaging, traceability, irradiation dose, shelf life).
- Safety Data Sheet: Silsat Wipes (SSW6-01IR) (flammability and handling/storage guidance for the IPA-containing blend).
Last reviewed: May 26, 2026
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