Structural and physical-chemical properties of milk fat globules fractionated by a series of silicon carbide membranes

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Structural and physical-chemical properties of milk fat globules fractionated by a series of silicon carbide membranes. / Dons, Tobias; Kirkensgaard, Jacob J.K.; Candelario, Victor; Andersen, Ulf; Ahrné, Lilia.

I: Food Research International, Bind 192, 114680, 2024.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Dons, T, Kirkensgaard, JJK, Candelario, V, Andersen, U & Ahrné, L 2024, 'Structural and physical-chemical properties of milk fat globules fractionated by a series of silicon carbide membranes', Food Research International, bind 192, 114680. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodres.2024.114680

APA

Dons, T., Kirkensgaard, J. J. K., Candelario, V., Andersen, U., & Ahrné, L. (2024). Structural and physical-chemical properties of milk fat globules fractionated by a series of silicon carbide membranes. Food Research International, 192, [114680]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodres.2024.114680

Vancouver

Dons T, Kirkensgaard JJK, Candelario V, Andersen U, Ahrné L. Structural and physical-chemical properties of milk fat globules fractionated by a series of silicon carbide membranes. Food Research International. 2024;192. 114680. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodres.2024.114680

Author

Dons, Tobias ; Kirkensgaard, Jacob J.K. ; Candelario, Victor ; Andersen, Ulf ; Ahrné, Lilia. / Structural and physical-chemical properties of milk fat globules fractionated by a series of silicon carbide membranes. I: Food Research International. 2024 ; Bind 192.

Bibtex

@article{6666c2a883034f519db84153672f4faa,
title = "Structural and physical-chemical properties of milk fat globules fractionated by a series of silicon carbide membranes",
abstract = "Driven by the acknowledged health and functional properties of milk fat globules (MFGs), there is a growing interest to develop gentle methodologies for separation of fat from milk. In this study, separation of fat from raw milk and fractionation in streams containing MFGs of different size was achieved using a series of two silicon carbide ceramic membranes. A first step consisting of a 1.4 µm membrane aimed to concentrate the bulk of the fat, i.e. the larger MFGs (D[4,3] ∼ 4 µm) followed by a 0.5 µm fractionation aimed to concentrate the residual milk fat in the permeate, i.e. fraction with the smaller MFGs (D[4,3] ∼ 1.8–2.4 µm. The fat separation performance showed a yield of 92 % for the 1.4 µm membrane and 97 % for the 0.5 µm membrane. Both fat enriched retentates showed, by the confocal laser scanning microscopy, intact MFGs with limited damage in the MFG membrane. The fatty acid profile analysis and SAXS showed minor differences in fat acid composition and the crystallization behavior was related to differences in the fat content. The 0.5 µm permeate containing the smallest MFGs however showed larger aggregates and a trinomial particle size distribution, due to probably pore pressure induced coalescences. The series of silicon carbide membranes showed potential to concentrate some of MFGM proteins such as Periodic Schiff base 3/4 and cluster of differentiation 36 especially in the 0.5 µm retentates. A shift in casein to whey protein ratio from 80:20 (milk) to 50:50 was obtained in the final 0.5 µm permeate, which opens new opportunities for product development.",
keywords = "Confocal laser scanning microscopy, Microfiltration, Milk fat globules, Milk fat separation, Silicon carbide membranes, Small angle X-ray scattering",
author = "Tobias Dons and Kirkensgaard, {Jacob J.K.} and Victor Candelario and Ulf Andersen and Lilia Ahrn{\'e}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2024 The Authors",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1016/j.foodres.2024.114680",
language = "English",
volume = "192",
journal = "Food Research International",
issn = "0963-9969",
publisher = "Pergamon Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Structural and physical-chemical properties of milk fat globules fractionated by a series of silicon carbide membranes

AU - Dons, Tobias

AU - Kirkensgaard, Jacob J.K.

AU - Candelario, Victor

AU - Andersen, Ulf

AU - Ahrné, Lilia

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2024 The Authors

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - Driven by the acknowledged health and functional properties of milk fat globules (MFGs), there is a growing interest to develop gentle methodologies for separation of fat from milk. In this study, separation of fat from raw milk and fractionation in streams containing MFGs of different size was achieved using a series of two silicon carbide ceramic membranes. A first step consisting of a 1.4 µm membrane aimed to concentrate the bulk of the fat, i.e. the larger MFGs (D[4,3] ∼ 4 µm) followed by a 0.5 µm fractionation aimed to concentrate the residual milk fat in the permeate, i.e. fraction with the smaller MFGs (D[4,3] ∼ 1.8–2.4 µm. The fat separation performance showed a yield of 92 % for the 1.4 µm membrane and 97 % for the 0.5 µm membrane. Both fat enriched retentates showed, by the confocal laser scanning microscopy, intact MFGs with limited damage in the MFG membrane. The fatty acid profile analysis and SAXS showed minor differences in fat acid composition and the crystallization behavior was related to differences in the fat content. The 0.5 µm permeate containing the smallest MFGs however showed larger aggregates and a trinomial particle size distribution, due to probably pore pressure induced coalescences. The series of silicon carbide membranes showed potential to concentrate some of MFGM proteins such as Periodic Schiff base 3/4 and cluster of differentiation 36 especially in the 0.5 µm retentates. A shift in casein to whey protein ratio from 80:20 (milk) to 50:50 was obtained in the final 0.5 µm permeate, which opens new opportunities for product development.

AB - Driven by the acknowledged health and functional properties of milk fat globules (MFGs), there is a growing interest to develop gentle methodologies for separation of fat from milk. In this study, separation of fat from raw milk and fractionation in streams containing MFGs of different size was achieved using a series of two silicon carbide ceramic membranes. A first step consisting of a 1.4 µm membrane aimed to concentrate the bulk of the fat, i.e. the larger MFGs (D[4,3] ∼ 4 µm) followed by a 0.5 µm fractionation aimed to concentrate the residual milk fat in the permeate, i.e. fraction with the smaller MFGs (D[4,3] ∼ 1.8–2.4 µm. The fat separation performance showed a yield of 92 % for the 1.4 µm membrane and 97 % for the 0.5 µm membrane. Both fat enriched retentates showed, by the confocal laser scanning microscopy, intact MFGs with limited damage in the MFG membrane. The fatty acid profile analysis and SAXS showed minor differences in fat acid composition and the crystallization behavior was related to differences in the fat content. The 0.5 µm permeate containing the smallest MFGs however showed larger aggregates and a trinomial particle size distribution, due to probably pore pressure induced coalescences. The series of silicon carbide membranes showed potential to concentrate some of MFGM proteins such as Periodic Schiff base 3/4 and cluster of differentiation 36 especially in the 0.5 µm retentates. A shift in casein to whey protein ratio from 80:20 (milk) to 50:50 was obtained in the final 0.5 µm permeate, which opens new opportunities for product development.

KW - Confocal laser scanning microscopy

KW - Microfiltration

KW - Milk fat globules

KW - Milk fat separation

KW - Silicon carbide membranes

KW - Small angle X-ray scattering

U2 - 10.1016/j.foodres.2024.114680

DO - 10.1016/j.foodres.2024.114680

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85198234907

VL - 192

JO - Food Research International

JF - Food Research International

SN - 0963-9969

M1 - 114680

ER -

ID: 399670654