In this work, the complex wake flow from a double-slanted Ahmed body with an
upper slant of α = 25° and a standard single-slanted Ahmed body
with a slant angle of 40° were used to evaluate vortex identification methods
for automotive wake flows. Multiple three-dimensional (3D) vortex identification
methods including Q−, λ
2−, Ω− criteria, and Liutex method and the two-dimensional (2D)
Γ1− criterion were evaluated against the streamline topology as a
pseudo-truth model. Of the 3D methods analyzed, none were found to produce
wholly satisfactory results. The Q− and λ
2−criteria were plagued by high threshold sensitivity and a failure
to separate shear from rotation which led to inconsistent identification of the
weak, lower-rotation vortices. While the Ω−criterion was able to mitigate the
issues related to threshold sensitivity and separation of shear and rotation by
consistently identifying the weak vortices, the identified structure did not
align well with the streamline topology, producing mismatches at least three
times greater than any other method analyzed. This phenomenon was found to be
partially caused by geometry-induced solid body rotation (GISBR), in which the
complex geometry interacting with the flow results in streamline curvature that
produced local regions of solid body rotation without the presence of a vortex.
Additionally, the localized non-dimensionalization of the Ω−criterion was found
to exacerbate the effects of GISBR in mischaracterizing the weak,
lower-rotational flow structures. Of the methods tested, the Liutex method
offered the best compromise for 3D flows. Although the Γ1− criterion
was found to most consistently align with the streamline topology and was not
impacted noticeably by GISBR, the method is currently relegated to 2D flows due
to the need of assuming the axis of rotation. A possible extension of the
Γ1− criterion to 3D flows has also been proposed.