
thumb|Vial of vaccine and syringe thumb|Examples of modern flat-bottomed plastic vials thumb|Sterile single-use vial of eye drops A vial (also known as a phial or flacon) is a small glass or plastic vessel or bottle, often used to store medication in the form of liquids, powders, or capsules. They can also be used as scientific sample vessels; for instance, in autosampler devices in analytical chromatography. Vial-like glass containers date back to classical antiquity; modern vials are often made of plastics such as polypropylene. There are different types of vials such as a single dose vial a
thumb|Vial of vaccine and syringe thumb|Examples of modern flat-bottomed plastic vials thumb|Sterile single-use vial of eye drops A vial (also known as a phial or flacon) is a small glass or plastic vessel or bottle, often used to store medication in the form of liquids, powders, or capsules. They can also be used as scientific sample vessels; for instance, in autosampler devices in analytical chromatography. Vial-like glass containers date back to classical antiquity; modern vials are often made of plastics such as polypropylene. There are different types of vials such as a single dose vial and multi-dose vials often used for medications. The single dose vial is only used once whereas a multi-dose vial can be used more than once. The CDC sets specific guidelines on multi-dose vials.
==History and etymology == thumb|right|A double-handled glass vial from Syria, c. 4th century AD A vial can be tubular, or have a bottle-like shape with a neck. The volume defined by the neck is known as the headspace. The English word "vial" is derived from the Greek phiale, meaning "a broad flat container". Comparable terms include the Latin phiala, Late Latin fiola and Middle English fiole and viole.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).