Appendix 6 freezing point determination – LABEC M-MIA-A User Manual
Page 81
 
Ultrasonic milk analyser
APPENDIX 6 FREEZING POINT DETERMINATION
 
1. Methods for determination. 
The milk analyzer determines the freezing point of each sample and the 
quantity of added water. The milk analyser does not measure the freezing 
point, but calculates it from the components it depends on. The basic 
components in the milk are water, salts, lactose, FAT, proteins, minerals 
(salts) and acids. The freezing point depends only on the diluted in the milk 
components and quantity of the solvent (in the milk it is water). The ultrasonic 
technology allows direct measurement of FAT, proteins, lactose + salts (the 
soluble components, only influencing the freezing point), and the quantity of 
the solvent in % is determined by 100 % – total solids %, total solids = lactose 
% + FAT % + proteins % + salts % + acids %. 
Without understanding the meaning of the freezing point – determined or 
shown from the milk analyzer added water result easily may lead to a mistake 
for the value of this parameter. 
 
2. The basic freezing point. 
Milk freezes at lower temperature than water. The average freezing point of 
the raw milk in the most regions is at about -0,540
°С. The average reading
for your region is called “basic” freezing point. 
The freezing point of milk is a “physiological constant”. This does not mean 
that it will not vary. In fact feed, breed, season, time of lactation, climate, 
whether the sample is taken at the beginning, middle or end of lactation – all 
these factors will have an effect on the freezing point of the individual sample. 
This means that there is an average value of all these numbers. The more 
samples used in obtaining this average, the more reliable it is as a base. Or 
the basic freezing point is an average of freezing points of milk, taken from 
many cows. When a laboratory checks a producer, it is only comparing the 
average of the producer’s cows against a larger area average. 
The Health authorities establish the basic freezing point or agriculture 
departments in some regions, sometimes by universities, separate dairy 
producers, or their associations. Frequently, tolerances have been 
established on top of a basic freezing point to allow some variations in the 
milk as well as device or operator variations. 
Without mentioning the basic freezing point, the Association of Official 
Analytical Chemists now recommends an upper limit freezing point at -
0,525
°C (2,326 standard deviations above the most recently determined
North American average of –0,5404
°C), below which there will be at 95%
Operation manual
MRC.VER.01-02.10