Charles,
Since you are using a split injection, you should not inject faster than your total flow. Perhaps you should use a smaller syringe volume, like 1/2 or 1/4 mL.
Now, consider: 60 min to equilibrate a vial of 6 mL ?
You should reach equilibration if a volume of 0.5mL is used in about 10 min. You should reach a reproducible situation (one in which can be validated in performance) in 5 min.
Question for thought:
What is the pressure inside the vial when you sample it?
What is the pressure inside the syringe after you fill it?
What happens to the gas in the syringe when you pull it out of the vial?
Does the pressure remain the same pressure inside the vial? Or does the gas 'leak' out of the syringe until ambient pressure is reached?
If the syringe is injected before the syringe contents reach ambient pressure and you inject the syringe contents into the injector, what kind of reproducibility should you expect?
Next question for thought:
Vial sealing and permeability:
Do you assume your septa never leak slowly over time, that a perfect seal is ALWAYS attained, every time.
I DON'T.
Do you assume your septa never absorbs the volatile solvents and that a secondary and changing equilibrium is NEVER attained for EACH of the solvents, with a different partition value for EACH of the solvents ?
Note: If you are not using septa with teflon lined silicone rubber base you are doing something wrong.
I DON'T.
Recommendations:
Use less than 0.5 mL total liquid in a 10mL vial. (20mg sample)
Equilibrate at 80°C for no more than 10 min.
Simple experiment: Inject 4 samples after 5, 10, 15, and 20 min in the equilibration oven.
I found RSDs for toluene at those conditons would vary 2%, 2%, 3%, 6%, and that is having 'perfect' septa and sealing. With common septa and sealing, the values were 3% 4% 8% and 12%. When heated for 60 min my RSDs were closer to 15-20%.
If you have more than 1000µg (5%) of each solvent of each solvent then you have too much sample to partition the solvents. REDUCE SAMPLE SIZE. The greatest cause for poor reproducibility in headspace is too large or too small a sample. Too small is easy to see (where is that peak?) Too big is not. (forest for the trees)
As long as you are trying to measure solvent amounts that the unit is capable of handling you should be ok. But if you are trying to reach ppm levels, I would use SPME headspace and accept the 5-10% RSDs. Of course you should be able to measure down in the ppb range with SPME headspace, but still with less than 15% RSDs.
Good luck, Chuck.
Rod