OK, as noted above gas sampling valves are the way to go, whatever ths sample is in, and whatever the pressure. The normal flow through systems above work fine when you have large, or on-line, samples
Obviously, if your sample is precious/limited in size/low pressure, then the solution is to run the sampling loop on the GSV at reduced pressure.
The small sample size also reduces the effect of reduced sample pressure with each large sample, which may help other analyses on the same sample.
It's not that hard, you just need a vacuum pump, a vacuum sensor, a tee joint, and a toggle shutoff valve. I use a 0 - 1000 mm Hg low-internal-volume sensor ( from Sensym ). The critical aspect is knowing what the pressure in the loop is just prior to injection.
There is one trick worth noting. Small diameter sample loops are notoriously difficult to vacuum purge of heavy residual gases, so I use a small ( 1 cm3 ) SS chamber volume on the other side of the loop, and a six port sampling valve.
The chamber allows molecular streaming through the loop, and helps purge the loop, as well as giving a more stable sample pressure. The easiest way to make such a chamber is to use a 1/16" to 1/2" swagelok reducer combined with a 1/2" plug.
You hook the pump to the toggle valve, and the valve to the tee, with one arm of the tee going to your septum bottle, using a luer lock needle blocked by a septum, or preferably a small needle valve.
If you use the simple block by a septum method, you should then put that septum against the vial sepatum, and push through both septa when collecting samples. You can also get sample bottles with simple valves on them, which I prefer to use.
Never use the vial septum as the blocking septum, as Sod's law states the most valuable sample will be the one where you push the needle too far, and the whole sample is evacuated.
That means the evacuation sequence is :-
pump->toggle valve->Tee->pressure sensor->sample loop->1cm3 volume.
Withe the needle blocked by a septum and the sampling valve in the fill position, you pull a vacuum on the whole system, close the pump off, vacuum should stay at zero. Then gently push needle through into the vial, until you have a suitable pressure in the loop and withdraw into septum. Wait a couple of seconds for the pressure to stabilise, record pressure, and inject.
One advantage of this system is that you can easily adjust the sample pressure if your peaks are too small or large, and don't have to change loops so often.
Note that if you can use large samples, the flow through method mentioned by others with a small water head at the outlet is very accurate, without the need for a pressure sensor or vacuum pump. The above method is good for grab samples at near atmospheric pressures, and for small samples.
Please keep having fun,
Bruce Hamilton