I read about that McL plans a wing with 2 F-duct slots on another forum, not sure if it´s true or not.
Why would they do it?
I´m not sure off course, just some thoughts.
If you have flow seperation on a wing or a body, and the wing cord is long enough, the flow can/will reattach to it again.
THerefore if they plan, to stall the mainplane maybe further forward, they need to blow the flap, to keep the flow seperated.
OTAH, there will still be airflow through the slot inbetween the main plane and the flap, even if they stall/seperate the flow on the underside of the mainplane, which could still follow the flap underside upward.
As they can´t close the gap (as teams did in the past with there first version of stalled rear wings) they may need to "blow" the attached flow away again (second F-duct slot on the flap underside) to achieve total seperation and minimum drag.
As Korea seems to have a very long straight, where every km/h topspeed counts, this is maybe the reason, to try to have as little drag as possible, and is worth the extra effort for a twin F-duct slot.
But I don´t know for sure, could be wrong
Just my two cent.
photo/CFD of reattached flow after seperation on an aeroplane wing
EDIT: corrected photos(CFD into photo/CFD