I ran hexanes and pentane for a troubleshooting exercise. Both tailed just as the other low BP compounds did before. After looking more closely at a GC troubleshooting poster on the wall in lab I realized it is more accurate to say my chromatograms have "chair" shaped peaks.
Larger ID liner had little to no effect.
Split injection results in satisfactory peak shapes. Reduced signal intensity but very minimal tail/chair.
I also ran pentane with a 10:1 split ratio that doesn't look very good, though it is an improvement over splitless injection with a splitless time of 30seconds & split ratio of 10:1 (both at 1.2mL/min).
I think CE Instruments was getting at this in the last post: seems what happens is the solvent condenses on the front of the column, and some of the analyte is re-dissolved into the toluene (which is acting as a pseudo stationary phase). A good portion of the sample elutes in a nice sharp peak but the "chair" shape comes from the slow evaporation of the low BP compounds out of the toluene that is still condensed on the front of the column as carrier gas passes over. Basically the same idea of refocusing by solvent effect, but with the BP of solvent higher than that of analyte, things do not work out well.
The PhotoBucket link below has six chromatograms, each labeled in their respective descriptions.
http://s1367.photobucket.com/user/Chemi ... sort=3&o=0