There
are two manufacturing methods for PTFE used in headspace caps. The first method
is skiving. In this technique, a long tube-shaped portion of PTFE material is mechanically
cut at regular intervals to produce the circular septa discs used in the final
headspace cap product. The second method is known as casting. Here the PTFE
material is poured into molds in the shape of the headspace septa. Skiving is
the cheaper of the two techniques because quality molds are expensive to
manufacture. However, the skiving process is known to produce widespread defects
in the material surface. On the edges of the material where the PTFE contacts
the vial when sealed, these defects cause gaps in which volatile compounds may
escape.
The
difference in quality between these two septa types is readily apparent under
magnification. Figure A below shows the PTFE side of a cast septum used in
MicroSolv HeadSpace Crimp Caps (catalog # 95025-07-1S). The surface here has
only a few minor imperfections. In Figure B, the PTFE surface of a market
leading skived headspace cap is shown. Here the surface has significant grooves
all throughout the material. These grooves are the result of skiving
techniques.
Figure A
No comments:
Post a Comment