@Orthomead- I doubt it was studied during the heyday of vinyl because wet cleaning (apart from the Monks/Loricraft) wasn’t common. I wonder if Neil @Antinn has any thoughts from a materials science perspective?
I usually clean in batches, largely to sort out condition more closely, evaluate for warps (which then go into the flattener and those aren’t getting played quickly) and so I can go into the next listening session without having to clean first. So there's usually some time interval between clean and play. I have, on occasion, done a quick clean up on a previously cleaned album by a quick dunk in the ultrasonic w/ forced air drying-- not necessarily optimal, but a choice between the concern you described (which I hadn’t really thought much about) and playing a record with surface detritus.
I usually clean in batches, largely to sort out condition more closely, evaluate for warps (which then go into the flattener and those aren’t getting played quickly) and so I can go into the next listening session without having to clean first. So there's usually some time interval between clean and play. I have, on occasion, done a quick clean up on a previously cleaned album by a quick dunk in the ultrasonic w/ forced air drying-- not necessarily optimal, but a choice between the concern you described (which I hadn’t really thought much about) and playing a record with surface detritus.