Effectiveness of Pulsed Electric Fields in Controlling Microbial Growth in Milk
A study was conducted to assess the effectiveness of pulsed electric field (PEF) inactivation of a heterogeneous community of microbes. The aim was to assess the impact of process parameters on an indigenous population of microbes present in milk, rather than pure cultures used in other studies. Tests over an electric field strength range of 10 40 kV/cm and 10 to 120 pulses per millilitre showed that high electric field strength and pulse number inactivated microbes by up to approximately 2 log. Inoculum size affected PEF effectiveness when only a few pulses were applied. A significant log-reduction was achieved against the indigenous microbes found in milk that were apparently recalcitrant to commercial pasteurization. Microbial inactivation was more extensive when E. coli was not added to the indigenous population, indicating that the added pure culture was more resistant than the indigenous microbes. The milk fat content had a significant negative effect on the extent of log-reduction for indigenous microbes, when 2% and 18% levels were compared.