I started this as reply in a McL thread, but realised the topic is much more general than just one car, hence a new thread.
We saw most teams struggle to get their DDDs working on this years cars, so how will that feature evolve over this winter?
Some have suggested triple deck diffusers but my perspective is that we have two decks only because the rules require a surface at a set level. Also the loophole requires the supply to the upper part to come from a different source. AFAIK the split doesn't give a performance advantage in itself compared to a single diffuser of the same volume. The split could conceivably make them less efficient?
I can see that a third deck might be required if the teams tap into a third source for the air supply. Spatial reasons might require a separate deck to route the flow around an obstruction, ie suspension, drive train, crash structure etc.
Other factors will limit the development of the DDD. they need to be solved before the diffuser can significantly bigger. Brawn commented about the use of the DDD being more than just the diffuser - sorry ciro no ref, but is was a BBC interview at the track when McL jumped in performance.
Firstly, the DDD is an air exit route, so it needs a balanced air supply route. Then you can't change the under car air flow without having to rebalance the over car (and side) airflow. This results in a significant extra aero downforce on the rear which must surely mean you need to rearrange the other down and lateral forces to keep things in balance. That all requires the mechanical grip to be rebalanced, so that changes the suspension geometry and drive characteristics.
So it is not about who has the biggest or most decked diffuser, but who is able to incorporate in it in the most imaginative way.