Determination of Iodide in Milk Using the Iodide Specific Ion Electrode and its Application to Market Milk Samples
- 1 September 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Elsevier in Journal of Food Protection
- Vol. 43 (9) , 672-675
- https://doi.org/10.4315/0362-028x-43.9.672
Abstract
The iodide specific ion electrode was used to measure the iodide content of raw and commercially processed whole and skim milks. Average iodide values for raw milk and commercially processed milks were 220 and 620 μ g/L, respectively. The specific ion electrode can also be used to measure iodide in milk contaminated with iodophor sanitizing agent since the milk converts iodophor titratable iodine to the ionic iodide. Since free sulhydryl groups are also detected by the iodide electrode, the effects of heating milk on free sulfhydryl formation and electrode activity were established. These data indicate that in conventionally pasteurized milk, sulfhydryl groups are non-reactive and are not detected by the iodide electrode. However, the increase in free sulfhydryl formation was reflected by an increase in iodide electrode activity at temperatures above those of pasteurization. Whereas the iodide specific ion electrode has been previously used successfully to measure iodide content of raw milk, this method h...This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Determination of Iodide in Nutritional Beverage Products Using an Ion Selective ElectrodeJournal of AOAC INTERNATIONAL, 1978
- An Indirect Method for the Estimation of the Iodine Content in Raw MilkJournal of Dairy Science, 1978
- Sulfhydryl and Disulfide Groups in Skim Milk as Affected by Direct Ultra-High-Temperature Heating and Subsequent StorageJournal of Dairy Science, 1976
- The free and masked sulphydryl groups of heated milk and milk powder and a new method for their determinationJournal of Dairy Research, 1964