Advances, Mechanisms, and Hybrid Strategies in Low-Salinity and Smart Water Enhanced Oil Recovery: A Comprehensive Review
1. Hanadi Shahin, University of Zakho, Student, Iraq
2. Jafar Ali, University of Zakho, Professor, Iraq
Low-salinity waterflooding (LSW) and smart water injection have emerged as leading techniques in Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR), with significant potential to optimize oil production from sandstone and carbonate reservoirs. Over the past decade, advancements in the understanding of ion exchange, wettability modification, multi-ion interactions, and hybridization with chemical EOR methods have shifted LSW from a laboratory observation to a field-validated recovery strategy. This review integrates current progress in low-salinity, smart water, and hybrid LSW-chemical methods, highlighting breakthrough findings on nanoparticle synergy, polymer interactions, wettability alteration, pH effects, salinity thresholds, and reservoir mineralogical compatibility. Detailed evaluations of experimental, numerical, and pilot-scale field studies are presented, offering a structured perspective on the mechanisms and practical conditions that govern LSW success. Emerging hybrid methods combining surfactants, alkali, nanoparticles, and polymers with LSW demonstrate measurable improvements in sweep efficiency, mobility control, interfacial tension (IFT) reduction, and tertiary recovery potential. Overall, this review provides an extensive synthesis of current trends, implementation challenges, and research opportunities for future EOR operations.
Low-salinity waterflooding Smart water flooding Wettability alteration Hybrid EOR Nanoparticle-assisted EOR Carbonate and sandstone reservoirs
Low-salinity and smart waterflooding have transitioned from laboratory concepts to field-validated EOR strategies, supported by strong mechanistic understanding and promising field results. The technology's adaptability across sandstone and carbonate reservoirs, combined with rapid advancements in smart water formulation, makes LSW one of the most dynamic areas in modern petroleum engineering. Hybridization with chemical and nanomaterial-based EOR techniques further amplifies recovery potential, addressing limitations related to sweep efficiency, mobility, and IFT reduction. Numerical and pilot-study evidence underscores its practical viability, while ongoing innovation continues to refine and expand its application. Overall, LSW stands as a robust, cost-effective, and environmentally favorable technique poised to play a significant role in future oil recovery operations.
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The author alone is responsible for the study's conception, design, data collection, analysis, interpretation, and manuscript preparation.
No specific grants from any funding agencies in the public, commercial, or non-profit sectors were received for this research, authorship, or publication.
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The authors declare no conflicts of interest related to this study.
I express my gratitude to those who provided expertise and assistance throughout this study and manuscript preparation. Special thanks to the anonymous peer reviewers for their valuable feedback.
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