Adding a small amount of silver nitrate to the cuprotype solution significantly decreases exposure time.
Here's the formula I have used: 10mg water, 1mg ferric ammonium citrate, 0.4g sodium thiosulfate, 0.6g copper ii sulfate, 1.2g 5% silver nitrate solution
The end result looks identical to a cuprotype, but with much quicker exposure time.
Very interesting! This is a great improvement to the process. The slow exposure of cuprotype is, in my mind, its biggest flaw.
I assume that you mean 10 mL of water in your recipe not 10 mg. Is that correct? The same for the amount of silver nitrate solution... did you actually use 1.2 g or do you mean 1.2 mL?
Have you tried varying the silver content, especially trying smaller amounts? The chemist in me wonders if the silver could be acting as a catalyst. In which case small amounts could be just as effective.
My thought about mechanism goes like this... the ionic silver(I) would be reduced by the light to metallic silver(0) and is then re-oxidized back to silver(I) while reducing the copper(II) to copper(I). In other words the silver provides an alternate/additional path to copper(I). The rest of the chemistry of cuprotype would be unchanged.
Additionally, have you "stress tested' a print to see if there is residual silver in the print. I would do this by placing a fully processed and dried print in the bright sun for at least several hours. If the print darkens significantly, especially in the highlights, I would think that there is still unreacted silver present. If so, I would try fixing the cuprotype with sodium thiosulfate as one does for a salted paper print.
I have put trying this on my to do list.