by
krickos » Mon Aug 23, 2010 8:02 am
Hi Jana
A not too easy question, but will have a go at it.
First I would dig up raw data from the validation and find out what vial pressure settings was used then. This is necessary for the validation status of the method/methods.
Once this is done you face 2 options: Either use the settings used in validation (if it seems OK) or change it and you will have to deal with revalidation issues.
Generally regarding vial pressure on Agilents headspace samplers: Well some call vial pressurization a source of errors and a diluter

which is true in a sense. If your headspace oven temperature is high enough the pressure in the vial will be enough to perform a reproducible injection. In those cases one can still have the vial pressure on (200kPa) but set the pressurization time to 0,0 minutes, just to be sure that no sample can flow in the wrong direction.
The agilent headpspace operates with a pressure/loop injection which is different from older PE instruments such as HS-40 (balanced pressure). agilent system open ups the vial pressure against the atmosphere so basicly the vial pressure needs to be above atmosphere to get the gassample moving.
I can not claim that our "default" vial pressure when needed is entirely scientifly based but we tend to use 200kPa and keep it shorter in time (~0,5min) than typically on the PE instruments, and it works mostly for our purposes.
The vial pressure have impact on the "Loop fill/vent time" but normally I would say a setting of 0,2-0,4min would work.
The vial pressure is only one player in your headspace settings, what you want is to catch a reproducible "heartcut" of your gas sample and transfer it onto the column. In other words vial pressure may be ideal but still you can have issues.
For further insight in static headpspace I would recommend you to get hold of a copy of "static headspace-gas chromatpgraphy, theory and practise" by Bruno Kolb and Leslie S. Ettre; or something equivalent. So you at least can look things up.
And finally regarding a transfer from PE to Agilent. You might get away with a default setting on the agilent uinstrument, but you might aswell end up with doing individual tweaks especially if you have tight signal to noise demands on class 1 solvents for instance.