Date: 06-APR-2026 Last Updated: 06-APR-2026
A reliable vial seal is achieved by controlled torque that creates the correct balance of vertical and radial compression on the septum. Improper compression leads to leakage, evaporation, and injection failures.
Key Sealing Forces
-
Vertical compression: Downward force presses the septum against the vial rim
- Too little → weak seal, evaporation
- Too much → septum deformation, poor resealing
-
Radial compression: Lateral restraint keeps the septum centered
- Proper → stable seal, repeated punctures
- Excessive → bulging, stress, displacement
Torque Control
Torque drives both compression forces:
- Under‑tightening: loose septum, evaporation, contamination
- Over‑tightening: sep tum distortion and increased risk of push through
Correct torque produces a tight, uniform seal without damaging the septum.
Septum Push Through
Occurs when the septum is forced into the vial due to:
- Excessive torque
- Component incompatibility
- Poor‑quality septa
Results: loss of seal, contamination, blocked needles, inconsistent injections.
Evaporation Risk
Small sealing failures allow volatile loss, causing:
- Concentration changes
- Poor reproducibility
- Biased results
- Most critical for GC, trace analysis, and long autosampler runs.
Bonded Cap and Septa Benefits
- Consistent, engineered compression
- Eliminated septum misalignment
- Push‑through prevention
- Improved run‑to‑run reproducibility
Best Practices
- Use torque‑controlled capping tools
- Avoid over‑ and under‑tightening
- Do not mix cap and septa brands
- Inspect septa before use
- Use bonded systems for volatile or critical samples
Proper sealing depends on torque‑controlled compression. Bonded cap and septa systems reduce variability and protect sample integrity before analysis begins.