Unraveling the Influences of Sodium, Potassium, Magnesium, and Calcium on the Crystallization Behavior of Lactose

Author:

Wijayasinghe Rangani1ORCID,Vasiljevic Todor1ORCID,Chandrapala Jayani2

Affiliation:

1. Advanced Food Systems Research Unit, Institute of Sustainable Industries & Liveable Cities, College of Health and Biomedicine, Victoria University, Melbourne, VIC 8001, Australia

2. Biosciences and Food Technology, School of Science, RMIT University, Melbourne, VIC 3083, Australia

Abstract

The inability of lactose to properly crystallize due to the presence of high amounts of salts poses significant hurdles for its downstream processing with some dairy waste streams such as acid whey. This study aimed to investigate the physicochemical and thermal behaviors of lactose in the presence of cations commonly present in acid whey. A model-based study was conducted, utilizing various cations (Mg, Ca, K, and Na) at concentrations (8, 30, 38, and 22 mM, respectively) that are typically found in acid whey. The research experiments were conducted using a factorial design. The thermal analysis of concentrated solutions revealed augmentation in the enthalpy of water evaporation in the presence of individual cations and their combinations in comparison with pure lactose (698.4 J/g). The degree of enthalpy increased following the order of Na+ (918.6 J/g), K+ (936.6 J/g), Mg2+ (987.0 J/g), Ca2+ (993.2 J/g), and their mixture (1005.4 J/g). This resulted in a substantial crystal yield decline in the exactly reversed order to that of the enthalpy. The greatest decline was observed in the presence of the salt mixture (63%) followed by Ca (67%) compared with pure lactose (79%). The yield reduction was also inversely related to the solubility of lactose. The presence of divalent cations appeared to play a role in the isomerization of lactose molecules observed using DSC and XRD diffractograms according to the disappearance of peaks related to β lactose. The effect of salts on the crystallization of lactose was a combination of cation–lactose interactions, changes in the solubility of lactose, ion–dipole interactions between water and cations, and changes in the structure of water molecules. By deviating the composition of acid whey, the crystallization of lactose can be enhanced, leading to the improved downstream processing of acid whey.

Funder

Victoria University

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Plant Science,Health Professions (miscellaneous),Health (social science),Microbiology,Food Science

Reference44 articles.

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