RMIT University
Browse

Effect of low frequency ultrasound on lactose‐protein interactions in protein solution containing different casein to whey protein ratios

Download (1.07 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2025-11-06, 05:17 authored by Yuanyuan Zhao, Juhi Saxena, Vineetha Cherian, Ginigandarage Mayumi Shanika Wiranjanee SilvaGinigandarage Mayumi Shanika Wiranjanee Silva, Tuyen TruongTuyen Truong, Janage ChandrapalaJanage Chandrapala
<p dir="ltr">Milk systems containing varying casein‐whey ratios (80:20, 60:40, 50:50, 40:60, 20:80) and lactose concentrations similar to those of bovine milk underwent ultrasound at 20 kHz for 1, 5 and 10 min. The influences of low‐frequency ultrasound on the physicochemical, structural, thermal and water mobility properties of lactose/protein systems were examined. The physiochemical properties, protein structural changes, water mobility and lactose crystallisation behaviour were mainly a function of the type of protein, the ratio of proteins and the sonication time. The particle size, turbidity and pH values of all milk systems decreased with the increase in sonication time. A higher proportion of whey in the system decreased the lactose crystallisation temperature without sonication. FTIR results indicated that the addition of lactose to the milk system delayed the protein‐protein aggregation until 5 min of sonication.</p>

Funding

RMIT University

History

Related Materials

Journal

International Journal of Food Science & Technology

Volume

59

Issue

2

Start page

1037

End page

1050

Total pages

14

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Language

en

Copyright

© 2023 The Authors.

Usage metrics

    Scholarly Works

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC