Would a reasonably small amount of an auxiliary developing agent like catechol or hydroquinone extend the shelf life of concentrated Metol developer? IIRC
@Pixophrenic was doing some experiments along these lines and I don't know what his conclusions were.
This is a different reply to the same question, because it occurred to me that Raghu made a hint on our private little conversation on Edwal 12 here. Also, previously I had no time to read the whole thread. Sorry to be patronizing, but there is a difference between storing a developer with sulfite as principal preservative in the (near) absence of air and storing a half-full bottle with a developer, which keeps on in spite of the continuous air intake during occasional use. A third case is a working developer that is used from time to time and returned to the same vessel (the most challenging). In my other storage experiments I noticed a group of various historical developers called "pyramid", because they contain 3 developing agents (sorry, Mr Schwalberg), wherein one actually contributes to the image, the second one regenerates it, and a third one regenerates the second.
Edwal 12 is one such example, but I also found that combinations of metol-HQ-glycin, p-aminophenol-HQ-p-phenylene diamine, phenidone-HQ-glycin and a number of others do keep rather well in half-full bottles and generally better than respective two-agent combinations. In each case it does not mean that activity stays at 100%, but it drifts down slowly enough, to add, for example, a minute per every month stored. The problem with these tests, fairly obvious, is that if you start some storage test, you keep silence online and come back after a year or two. It is an inefficient way to test "storage extenders". I think, however, but have not tried it systematically, that a good model system is a developer based on amidol or pyrogallol which decomposes rapidly, and extending the life of, say, an amidol developer from a couple of days to retaining 50% of activity in a month would be an achievement.
Otherwise, I second the opinion expressed above that a proper vessel with a proper closure is at least as important as the chemical composition.