Ryuji
Member
Why would a long time in a sulfite-rich solution, in and of itself increase graininess? That seems odd, unless what you're seeing is simply more development taking place due to the developing agents being better preserved by the higher sulfite level, which would indeed increase graininess. But that's not "direct" action by the sulfite.
This is a very good and relevant question.
Some people here seem to jump to fallacious conclusions... many equate sulfite with solvent, solvent with physical development, physical development with fine grain effects, where each association here is problematic. For example, sulfite does a number of other things than dissolving silver halides. Solvent effect does not entail in physical development. Physical development may make larger or finer grain, often within the same emulsion and same developer. So, making a grand fallacy of sulfite = fine grain is misleading, but some seem to be trapped with it.
If the reported experiment was done very carefully, the most plausible explanation of the result is that sulfite acted as a mild disinhibitor or accelerator of development process, and this is well known.