Airlocks are used in air-to-air environments for a variety of reasons, most of which center around either preventing airborne contaminants from entering or exiting an area, or maintaining the air pressure of the interior chamber. One common use of airlock technology can be found in some
cleanrooms, where harmful or otherwise undesired
particulates can be excluded by using
positive pressure, maintaining the room at a higher pressure than the surroundings, alongside other measures. Conversely, particulates are prevented from escaping hazardous environments, such as
nuclear reactors,
laboratories of
biochemistry, and medical centers, by keeping
negative room pressure - maintaining the room at a lower pressure than the surroundings, so that air (and any particulates that it carries) cannot escape easily. A lesser-known application of an airlock is in architecture:
inflatable buildings and
air-supported structures such as pressurized domes require the internal air pressure to be maintained within a specific range so that the structure doesn't collapse. Airlocks are generally the most cost-efficient way to allow people to enter and exit these structures. Airlocks are utilized to maintain
electron microscope interiors at near-vacuum so that air does not affect the electron path.
Fermentation locks, such as those used in alcohol brewing, are a type of airlock which allow gases to escape the fermentation vessel while keeping air out.
Parachute airlocks are necessary because airfoil collapse due to depressurization can result in dangerous loss of altitude. Since the 1980s, airlock technology has been used to explore newly detected chambers in the
Egyptian pyramids, to prevent the contents from beginning to
decompose due to air contamination. == Underground ==