Does John Owen treat this in his book on the death of Christ?
Briefly, as follows: "Now from all this, thus much (to clear up the nature of the satisfaction made by Christ) appeareth,—namely, It was a full, valuable compensation, made to the justice of God, for all the sins of all those for whom he made satisfaction, by undergoing that same punishment which, by reason of the obligation that was upon them, they themselves were bound to undergo. When I say the same, I mean essentially the same in weight and pressure, though not in all accidents of duration and the like; for it was impossible that he should be detained by death."
It is explained further in his answer to Richard Baxter on the Death of Christ in the same volume (10) of his Works.