Hello Gruntguru
The dominant factors seem to be the speed of the sound and the speed of the burnt gas.
The following slides (from the youtube video animation):
piston at 10 degrees BTDC, above,
piston at the TDC, below.
With, more or less, all the air-fuel mixture of the main chamber concentrated into the bowl, the transfer ports open and the burnt (or still burning) gas (yellow) from the auxiliary combustion chamber bursts / explodes / rushes / plunges / dives into the bowl.
With the air-fuel mixture into the bowl being below, yet near, the threshold for auto-ignition,
with a maximum distance of 20mm from the transfer ports to the ends of the bowl,
and with, say, 500m/sec speed of the burnt gas exiting from the transfer ports (and, say, 500/5=100m/sec mean speed into the compact bowl),
the time required for the burnt gas to arrive to the ends of the bowl is:
0.02m / (100m/sec) = 0.0002 sec = 0.2msec.
This time interval corresponds to 7 crankshaft degrees at 6,000rpm.
During the initial part of the above mass transfer of hot / burnt gas to the ends of the bowl, another phenomenon takes place.
The compressed, but not yet burnt, air-fuel mixture into the main chamber undergoes a rapid / abrupt / sudden increase of its pressure.
The pressure wave from the opened transfer ports arrives to the ends of the bowl with sound velocity (the sound velocity at the specific temperature).
Before the opening of the “transfer ports”, the molecules / atoms of the air-fuel mixture in the main chamber are at equilibrium, yet at an “unstable equilibrium” because they are near the threshold for auto-ignition (similarly, the standing playing cards in the video are at an “unstable equilibrium”: a small displacement of the basis whereon they are standing, and they all fall).
The abrupt increase of the pressure after the opening of the “transfer ports” causes the local increase of the temperature and the spontaneous ignition of all the air-fuel mixture in the bowl (similarly, the slight displacement of the basis whereon the playing cards stands, video, causes the simultaneous fall of all the playing cards).
It seems that the two dominant factors (pressure wave and mass transfer) are supporting each other, are complementary.
What is left unburned by the pressure impact, will be burnt by the mass transfer.
Thanks
Manolis Pattakos