Excuse me Photo Engineer
Diethanolamine, DiEthan(O)l Amine (DEA or DE(O)A is an inhibitor, also a wetting agent, and is the name your are looking for. Again one answer from me ... I am glad to help. I thought you knew it!
But why does everybody ask questions and do not answer anyone? What are you guys hiding or playing? or is it only sturbornness?
Photo Engineer, perhaps are you trying to tell us that you don't know any developer with wetting agent??? or trying to divert the focus playing around with this additive?
Please stick to the point, I love merry-go-rounds, but only if they have a way to stop
Best
Wetting agents fall in to 3 classes, namely: Non-ionic, Anionic and Cationic. They are neutral in pH as sold. Photo flo is a nonionic surfactant while dish soaps are often cationic such as Di-Nonyl Napthalene Sulfonic Acid (DNNSA). Diethanol amine is properly a basic compound. Due to its nature it is also a weak Silver Halide solvent and as such is used in many developers. Triethanol amine is often contaminated by Diethanol amine and this causes pH to vary and Silver Halide properties to vary. The Diethanol Amine - SO2 complex or adduct is present as a carrier for Sulfite ion which acts as a preservative for the HQ, Phenidone or Metol which may be present. This is an answer not a question.
Surfactants are generally used very dilute such as Photo Flo 200 which is 1 ml or less / 200 ml of solution. They cause severe foam if mishandled, and change surface and viscosity properties. Although Diethanol amine can have surfactant properties, as noted by some, that is not its most notable property, at least in photography.
Common photographic surfactants are Saponin, Triton X 100 and Triton X 200 along with the DNNSA noted above.
Humectants are chemicals that force absorption of water, or retain water in a carrier such as paper or film. As such, they are washed out if used in developers and should be used for effect only in final rinse or stabilizer baths. They have no use in any solution, but rather are activated or become active only when the carrier is dried. Useful humectants include sorbitol and glycerol. They prevent cracking in dry photo materials and help preserve the final image depending on how they are used.
There, is that enough for you?
PE