To extract more efficiency in a diesel motor, a turbocharger is employed. This device has a turbine that is driven by exhast gas flow which spins a compressor thereby compressing the air fuel mixture. This pressurized mixture makes a bigger explosion in the engine which makes it more powerful and efficient.
The turbo itelf creates in excess of 2 bar (30 psi); to limit
this to the 1 bar the car needs, a wastegate vents
excess pressure to the atmoshphere. Factory spec is 0.9 to
1.0 bar, (about 15 psi) but they never came that way from the factory, most are in the 0.5 - 0.6 (about 7 psi) bar range. Calibrating this to factory spec makes a phenominal diference in performance.
When the turbo is doing it's thing, the motor will need extra
fuel to go with the extra air. A device called an ALDA senses
pressure and tells the injection pump to deliver more fuel.
Besides the wastegate, your engine is protected from the turbo
going nuts by an overboost sensor that cuts off extra fuel
if the boost exceeds 1.1 bar (about 16 psi). Without extra fuel
the turbo gives you no extra power. Without the protection the
wastegate and overboost sensor gives you, you'd melt your
engine from the inside out.
If all these things are clean and to factory spec, your car is
giving you optimal performance. You might not recogize the
way your car accelerates - it's quite dramatic.