Protective Pressure

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

Whenever the heroes enter a Mad Scientist Laboratory in an unconventional way, they'll experience slight air draft coming from inside (or the other way around). Same thing happens whenever a science-y MacGuffin is opened with a slight hiss.

In Real Life, keeping some 1.2 atmospheric pressures inside is part of airtight sealing of laboratories against dust and other dirt from the outside: even if dust manages to find a crack in the sealing, it'll be blown right out by the pressure difference. On the other hand, labs dealing with dangerous micro-organisms (bio-hazard levels 3 and 4) require the lab to maintain a negative pressure difference to suck whatever nastiness is developed there right back inside. This trope covers both cases.

In fiction, it is mostly used to invoke some Dramatic Wind appropriate for the occasion.

Examples of Protective Pressure include:


Anime & Manga


Film


Literature

  • This is how the Big Bad Laboratory in Michael Crichton's Prey defended itself against Nanomachines. They failed.
    • This was in place to keep the swarms out. This was made by the humans. The swarms took control of the humans. Is it any wonder it failed?
  • The X Wing Series of books has the Imperial labs on Coruscant that were developing the Krytos Virus designed this way. In case of a containment leak and someone came in, the air would flow in instead of out, preventing the virus from leaving the building.