FWIW the turbo charger works off of the heat energy in the exhaust system. since the volumtric efficency of a turbo charged diesel engine is above 100% so the air filter makes pretty much zero difference to operations in the exhaust system.
VE is only >100% if all components allow it to be so. Just because you have a turbo doesn't mean you get to run a 2" exhaust, 1" intercooler piping and an air filter from a lawn mower.
The turbo harvests energy from two sources. One, pressure relieved when the exhaust valve opens. This is the "free" energy because the piston is already at BDC and no additional work (expansion) can be extracted by the rotating assembly. Second, the pistons do work on the exhaust stroke, forcing exhaust gasses through the turbine. This is not "free" energy and the rotating assembly actually drives the turbine in this regard.
And no, it doesn't run off heat energy any more than an drill that runs on compressed air runs on heat energy. It runs on pressure*flow rate (mechanical) energy. The drop in temperature across the turbine is merely a function of the ideal gas law; gasses cool when we allow for their expansion.
It isn't that the soot loading due to intake restriction is an operational issue with the exhaust. It's an operational issue with the engine. I am befuddled by this not being exceedingly apparent.
I'm not aware of a DPF equipped truck without a VGT. Said VGT has vanes, controlled by the PCM, to achieve targeted manifold density for commanded load. (Or more precisely, achieve commanded airflow that corresponds to commanded fuel rate that corresponds to the commanded throttle/torque value.) If an intake restriction results in less air, the calibration
ideally compensates by either 1) limiting fuel or 2) commanding and waiting for more air to show up (close VGT vanes). If the calibration doesn't effectively do this and continues to deliver commanded fuel (despite insufficient air), even if only at some very specific operational conditions, soot production increases...hence, this discussion.
you can also point out that the more restrictive a filter is the more particles it filters but its a balancing act between flow and capacity.
The correlation may be true but not absolute. A block of wood in the intake would make a pretty good restriction but offer zero additional filtration. Yes, filtration often comes at the expense of restriction for a given media type. The simple solution is to give your filter engineer the budget to increase surface area of the media (bigger filter face, more pleats, or deeper pleats) and/or use better media that is less restrictive for a given filtration efficiency.
The AB filter and the AA filter both meet the flow/filtration specifications given to the supplier by Mopar.