Hi Ziman
No, fast is nowhere near the most important. Do not try to copy the action of an autoinjector.
Assuming that you have all you GC conditions set right, here is an extract of the notes for a course that I give on Basic Capillary GC:
Loading the syringe with sample
There are three practically useful ways of loading a microsyringe with sample:
1. Sample fill:
rinse the syringe with solvent by drawing up and ejecting to waste at least 6 times.
draw more than the required volume of sample into the syringe and eject to waste at least three times.
keeping the tip of the needle in the sample, draw up sample and expel it quickly to get rid of air bubbles. If the bubbles do not go away, you probably have a leak between the needle and the syringe barrel.
move the tip of the plunger to the mark, take the needle out of the sample, wipe the outside of the needle, draw the sample up into the barrel, inject.
Because some sample evaporates from the needle the volume injected is always more than was drawn into the barrel. If you really want to know how much was injected draw the sample back into the barrel with the tip of the plunger on a mark, read where the sample meniscus is (if you have an air cushion read both ends of the sample plug), inject and then draw the residue into the barrel, put the tip of the plunger at the same mark and read again.
2. Solvent flush
If the actual volume of sample injected has to be a particular measured amount, then use solvent flush injection:
draw 1 l of solvent into the syringe with no bubbles,
draw the plunger back 1 l to form an air gap
draw in the required volume of sample with no air bubbles
draw the plunger back to pull the sample up into the barrel
inject
If anything goes wrong you have to start all over again.
3. Air cushion:
rinse the syringe with solvent and return the plunger to the zero mark.
draw the plunger back to the 2 l mark to draw a plug of air into the barrel.
put the needle into the sample and draw the plunger back to the 3 l mark, withdraw the needle from the sample, draw the sample up into the syringe barrel, wipe the needle.
inject
Note that this is actually a solvent flush injection with less solvent and more air, the pressure in the inlet compresses the air cushion so it is very difficult to be certain how much sample gets injected. This technique is not recommended.
Injection
The most robust manual injection technique is:
insert the needle through the septum
when the syringe barrel touches the injector nut start counting 1,2,3
depress the plunger quickly (not sharply)
count 1,2,3
remove the needle from the inlet.
Remember to rinse the syringe with solvent immediately after each injection.
Do not bother to try a manual version of a fast, cold needle autosampler injection.
As long as samples and standards are injected the same, the actual injection volume does not matter. This means that samples and standards must be in the same solvent and must be injected by the same operator. Never inject different volumes of standards and samples.
Consistency is the key to repeatable injections.
Enjoy !!!!
Peter