Non-Thermal Milk Decontamination by Ionic Modulation: A Deionization-Based Alternative to Pasteurization
María T. Andrés, Jessica González-Seisdedos, Victoria Antuña, José F. Fierro

TL;DR
This study introduces a non-thermal method for decontaminating milk by reducing its ionic strength, achieving microbial safety similar to pasteurization while preserving milk quality.
Contribution
A novel non-thermal decontamination method using ionic modulation as an alternative to pasteurization is proposed and validated.
Findings
Milk deionization reduced microbial load to levels comparable with pasteurization.
Deionization preserved major milk constituents but partially removed low-molecular-weight solutes.
Deionized milk showed improved stability during refrigerated storage.
Abstract
The dairy industry requires effective non-thermal processing strategies capable of ensuring microbial safety while preserving the nutritional and bioactive quality of milk. This study describes a novel milk decontamination approach based on selective ionic removal by dialysis, resulting in a controlled reduction in ionic strength. Milk deionization significantly reduced the microbial load in raw bovine milk to levels comparable to those achieved by conventional thermal pasteurization, while largely preserving its physicochemical composition. Ionic depletion enhanced the antimicrobial effectiveness of endogenous milk components; this effect was abolished when native salt concentrations were maintained, highlighting the key role of ionic modulation in microbial control. Major milk constituents, including proteins, fat, and solids-not-fat, were not substantially affected by deionization,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMilk Quality and Mastitis in Dairy Cows · Proteins in Food Systems · Food Drying and Modeling
