Milk - Determination of casein-nitrogen content - Part 1: Indirect method (Reference method)

ISO 17997-1|IDF 29-1:2004 specifies a reference method for the indirect determination of the casein-nitrogen content of bovine milk. It can be modified for milk from other species or liquid dairy products.

Lait — Détermination de la teneur en azote de caséine — Partie 1: Méthode indirecte (Méthode de référence)

General Information

Status
Published
Publication Date
20-Sep-2004
Current Stage
9092 - International Standard to be revised
Start Date
24-Apr-2025
Completion Date
30-Oct-2025

Relations

Effective Date
06-Jun-2022

Overview

ISO 17997-1:2004 (IDF 29-1:2004) defines a reference (indirect) method for determining the casein‑nitrogen content of bovine milk. The method precipitates casein at acid pH, measures the remaining (non‑casein) nitrogen, and calculates casein‑nitrogen as the difference from total nitrogen. It is a laboratory reference method intended for accurate, comparable results and can be modified for other milk species or liquid dairy products.

Key topics and technical requirements

  • Principle: Determine total nitrogen (Kjeldahl methods per ISO 8968‑1 or ISO 8968‑2), precipitate casein by adding acetic acid and sodium acetate (final pH ≈ 4.6), filter, and measure nitrogen in the filtrate. Casein‑N = total N − non‑casein N.
  • Reagents & volumes: Example reagents specified include acetic acid solution (1.75 mol/L) and sodium acetate solution (1.00 mol/L); a typical test portion is ~10 g milk diluted with 75 mL water, with 1 mL of each reagent added following the procedure.
  • Apparatus: Standard laboratory glassware (ISO 1042, ISO 648), Kjeldahl digestion/distillation equipment, water bath (38–40 °C), nitrogen‑free filter paper, analytical balance and pipettes.
  • Sample handling: Warm to 38–40 °C to melt fat, mix gently, and complete sample preparation steps within 30 minutes to limit proteolytic breakdown of casein.
  • Calculations: Non‑casein nitrogen is calculated from titrant volume, molarity and sample mass (including a standard multiplicative correction factor 0.994 for typical bovine milk). Protein and casein contents are derived using the conversion factor 6.38.
  • Quality & precision: Method precision and reproducibility were evaluated in interlaboratory studies (ISO 5725 principles). A blank test and careful titration records are required.
  • Safety: Standard warns of hazardous materials and operations; users must follow appropriate safety and regulatory rules.

Applications and users

  • Dairy testing and quality control laboratories validating casein content in raw milk or liquid dairy products.
  • Regulatory agencies and standards bodies requiring a reference method for compliance and enforcement.
  • Research laboratories studying milk composition, casein stability, proteolysis and heat‑treatment effects.
  • Producers and instrument manufacturers using reference results to calibrate rapid methods (e.g., infrared milk analyzers).

Related standards

  • ISO 17997‑2 / IDF 29‑2 - Direct (routine) method for casein‑nitrogen
  • ISO 8968‑1 / IDF 20‑1 and ISO 8968‑2 / IDF 20‑2 - Total nitrogen (Kjeldahl/block digestion)
  • ISO 707 - Milk sampling
  • ISO 648, ISO 1042 - Laboratory glassware specifications
  • ISO 5725 - Precision of measurement methods

Keywords: ISO 17997-1:2004, casein‑nitrogen, milk analysis, indirect method, reference method, Kjeldahl, non‑casein nitrogen, dairy laboratory, milk testing.

Standard

ISO 17997-1:2004 - Milk -- Determination of casein-nitrogen content

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Frequently Asked Questions

ISO 17997-1:2004 is a standard published by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO). Its full title is "Milk - Determination of casein-nitrogen content - Part 1: Indirect method (Reference method)". This standard covers: ISO 17997-1|IDF 29-1:2004 specifies a reference method for the indirect determination of the casein-nitrogen content of bovine milk. It can be modified for milk from other species or liquid dairy products.

ISO 17997-1|IDF 29-1:2004 specifies a reference method for the indirect determination of the casein-nitrogen content of bovine milk. It can be modified for milk from other species or liquid dairy products.

ISO 17997-1:2004 is classified under the following ICS (International Classification for Standards) categories: 67.100.10 - Milk and processed milk products. The ICS classification helps identify the subject area and facilitates finding related standards.

ISO 17997-1:2004 has the following relationships with other standards: It is inter standard links to ISO 6581:2010. Understanding these relationships helps ensure you are using the most current and applicable version of the standard.

ISO 17997-1:2004 is available in PDF format for immediate download after purchase. The document can be added to your cart and obtained through the secure checkout process. Digital delivery ensures instant access to the complete standard document.

Standards Content (Sample)


INTERNATIONAL ISO
STANDARD 17997-1
IDF
29-1
First edition
2004-09-15
Milk — Determination of casein-nitrogen
content —
Part 1:
Indirect method (Reference method)
Lait — Détermination de la teneur en azote de caséine —
Partie 1: Méthode indirecte (Méthode de référence)

Reference numbers
IDF 29-1:2004(E)
©
ISO and IDF 2004
IDF 29-1:2004(E)
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©  ISO and IDF 2004
All rights reserved. Unless otherwise specified, no part of this publication may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means,
electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and microfilm, without permission in writing from either ISO or IDF at the respective
address below.
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Published in Switzerland
ii © ISO and IDF 2004 – All rights reserved

IDF 29-1:2004(E)
Foreword
ISO (the International Organization for Standardization) is a worldwide federation of national standards
bodies (ISO member bodies). The work of preparing International Standards is normally carried out through
ISO technical committees. Each member body interested in a subject for which a technical committee has
been established has the right to be represented on that committee. International organizations, governmental
and non-governmental, in liaison with ISO, also take part in the work. ISO collaborates closely with the
International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) on all matters of electrotechnical standardization.
International Standards are drafted in accordance with the rules given in the ISO/IEC Directives, Part 2.
The main task of technical committees is to prepare International Standards. Draft International Standards
adopted by the technical committees are circulated to the member bodies for voting. Publication as an
International Standard requires approval by at least 75 % of the member bodies casting a vote.
Attention is drawn to the possibility that some of the elements of this document may be the subject of patent
rights. ISO shall not be held responsible for identifying any or all such patent rights.
ISO 17997-1IDF 29-1 was prepared by Technical Committee ISO/TC 34, Food products, Subcommittee
SC 5, Milk and milk products, and the International Dairy Federation (IDF), in collaboration with AOAC
International. It is being published jointly by ISO and IDF and separately by AOAC International.
ISO 17997IDF 29 consists of the following parts, under the general title Milk — Determination of casein-
nitrogen content:
 Part 1: Indirect method (Reference method)
 Part 2: Direct method
IDF 29-1:2004(E)
Foreword
IDF (the International Dairy Federation) is a worldwide federation of the dairy sector with a National
Committee in every member country. Every National Committee has the right to be represented on the IDF
Standing Committees carrying out the technical work. IDF collaborates with ISO and AOAC International in
the development of standard methods of analysis and sampling for milk and milk products.
Draft International Standards adopted by the Action Teams and Standing Committees are circulated to the
National Committees for voting. Publication as an International Standard requires approval by at least 50% of
IDF National Committees casting a vote.
ISO 17797-1IDF 29-1 was prepared by Technical Committee ISO/TC 34, Food products, Subcommittee
SC 5, Milk and milk products, and the International Dairy Federation (IDF), in collaboration with AOAC
International. It is being published jointly by ISO and IDF and separately by AOAC International.
All work was carried out by the Joint ISO/IDF/AOAC Action Team on Nitrogen compounds, of the Standing
Committee on Main components in milk.
This edition of ISO 17997-1IDF 29-1, together with ISO 17997-2IDF 29-2, cancels and replaces the first
edition of IDF 29:1964, which has been technically revised.
ISO 17997IDF 29 consists of the following parts, under the general title Milk — Determination of casein-
nitrogen content:
 Part 1: Indirect method (Reference method)
 Part 2: Direct method
iv © ISO and IDF 2004 – All rights reserved

IDF 29-1:2004(E)
Introduction
This part of ISO 17997IDF 29 is a classical reference method for the indirect determination of the casein-
nitrogen content of milk. No collaborative study data were available for this method when publishing the first
edition of IDF 29:1964.
Recent research has been completed to develop a better defined indirect reference method. A routine method
for the direct measurement of the casein-nitrogen content of milk is given in ISO 17997-2IDF 29-2. Both parts
of ISO 17997IDF 29 have been collaboratively studied and a reference to the obtained precision data is now
included in each part.
INTERNATIONAL STANDARD
IDF 29-1:2004(E)
Milk — Determination of casein-nitrogen content —
Part 1:
Indirect method (Reference method)
WARNING — The use of the method and equipment described in this standard may involve hazardous
materials, operations and equipment. This standard does not purport to address all the safety risks
associated with its use. It is the responsibility of the user of this standard to establish appropriate
safety and health practices and determine the applicability of local regulatory limitations prior to use.
1 Scope
This part of ISO 17997IDF 29 specifies a reference method for the indirect determination of the casein-
nitrogen content of bovine milk.
The method can be modified for milk from other species or liquid dairy products.
NOTE Casein nitrogen will decrease with milk storage time due to casein breakdown even at 4 °C. The casein
nitrogen of heat-treated milk will be artificially high because of whey-protein denaturation.
2 Normative references
The following referenced documents are indispensable for the application of this document. For dated
references, only the edition cited applies. For undated references, the latest edition of the referenced
document (including any amendments) applies.
ISO 648:1977, Laboratory glassware — One-mark pipettes
ISO 1042:1998, Laboratory glassware — One-mark volumetric flasks
ISO 8968-1IDF 20-1, Milk — Determination of nitrogen content — Part 1: Kjeldahl method
ISO 8968-2IDF 20-2, Milk — Determination of nitrogen content — Part 2: Block-digestion method (Macro
method)
3 Terms and definitions
For the purposes of this document, the following terms and definitions apply.
3.1
non-casein-nitrogen content
mass fraction of substances determined according to the procedures specified in this part of
ISO 17997IDF 29
IDF 29-1:2004(E)
3.2
casein-nitrogen content
mass fraction of substances determined according to the procedures specified in this part of
ISO 17997IDF 29
NOTE Both the non-casein-nitrogen content and the casein-nitrogen content are expressed as a mass fraction in
percent.
4 Principle
The total-nitrogen content of a test sample is determined by the method of either ISO 8968-1IDF 20-1 or
ISO 8968-2IDF 20-2. Casein is precipitated from a separate test portion of the same milk by the addition of
acetic acid and sodium acetate solutions, such that the final pH of the mixture is approximately 4,6. The
precipitated milk casein is removed by filtration, so the remaining filtrate contains the non-casein-nitrogen
components. The nitrogen content of the filtrate is determined by the procedure described in
ISO 8968-1IDF 20-1 or ISO 8968-2IDF 20-2. The casein-nitrogen content is calculated as the difference
between the total-nitrogen content and the non-casein-nitrogen content of the milk.
5 Reagents
Use only reagents of recognized analytical grade and glass-distilled water or water of at least equivalent purity.
5.1 Reagents for determination of total nitrogen.
Use the reagents specified in ISO 8968-1IDF 20-1 or ISO 8968-2IDF 20-2.
5.2 Acetic acid solution, c(CH CO H) = 1,75 mol/l.
3 2
Using a volumetric pipette (6.6), add 10,0 ml of glacial acetic acid in a 100 ml volumetric flask (6.3). Dilute to
the mark with water.
5.3 Sodium acetate solution, c(CH CO Na) = 1 mol/l.
3 2
Dissolve 8,20 g of sodium acetate or 13,60 g of sodium acetate trihydrate in water in a 100 ml volumetric flask
(6.3). Dilute to the mark with water.
The sodium acetate solution may be stored at room temperature for one week or at between 0 °C and 4 °C for
6 months.
6 Apparatus
Usual laboratory equipment and, in particular, the following.
6.1 Apparatus for determination of total nitrogen.
Use that specified in ISO 8968-1IDF 20-1 or ISO 8968-2IDF 20-2.
6.2 Water bath, capable of maintaining a temperature of 38 °C to 40 °C.
6.3 One-mark volumetric flasks, with stoppers, of capacity 100 ml, conforming to ISO 1042:1998, class A.
6.4 Bottle-top dispenser, capable of delivering 75 ml of water (optional).
6.5 Graduated measuring cylinder, of capacity up to 100 ml.
2 © ISO and IDF 2004 – All rights reserved

IDF 29-1:2004(E)
6.6 One-mark volumetric pipettes, of capacity 1 ml, 10 ml and 50 ml, conforming to ISO 648:1977,
class A.
6.7 Filter funnel, made of glass or plastic, of diameter 75 mm.
1)
6.8 Filter paper, of diameter 15 cm, nitrogen-free (e.g. Whatman No. 1 or equivalent).
Pleat before use.
6.9 Conical flasks, or equivalent, of capacity 100 ml.
6.10 Analytical balance, capable of weighing to the nearest 0,1 mg.
6.11 Automatic pipettor or (adjustable) micropipette, capable of delivering 1,0 ml (optional).
7 Sampling
It is important that the laboratory receive a sample which is truly representative and has not been damaged or
changed during transport or storage.
Sampling is not part of the method specified in this part of ISO 17997IDF 29. A recommended sampling
method is given in ISO 707.
8 Preparation of test sample
Warm the test sample in the water bath (6.2) set at betwee
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