“…Surfactants, as an industrial additive, are widely applied in petrochemical, mining, medical treatment, food processing, and other industrial fields due to their unique interfacial properties. − Due to their performance in reducing oil–water interfacial tension, alternating wettability, solubilizing crude oil, and changing the interfacial rheology, they can release the crude oil trapped and adhered in the porous medium of the rock, thus enhancing oil recovery (EOR). − Especially, in response to the emergence of the tertiary oil recovery process in recent years, a growing number of surfactants have been screened, designed, or improved to become efficient chemical flooding agents, such as those applied in alkaline/surfactant/polymer (ASP) flooding. − At present, anionic surfactants, such as sodium dodecyl benzene sulfonate (SDBS), are the most widely used surfactants in the tertiary oil recovery process, which have an amphiphilic molecular structure. When present in oil–water systems, they are bound to be adsorbed and arranged at the oil–water interface to form an interfacial film .…”