Low-salinity water
flooding (LSWF) is an emerging and inexpensive
enhanced oil recovery (EOR) method. The technique hinges on the following
concept: as salinity of injected water reduces, additional oil is
recovered. However, LSWF remains emerging because its underlying mechanisms
have been largely elusive, and the identified ones have been controversial.
If properly investigated, smart water injection may contribute to
harnessing both heavy-oil reservoirs, which account for nearly 80%
of world’s petroleum reserves, and conventional light-to-medium
oil reservoirs. This report presents a comprehensive review of low-salinity
water injection as an EOR method, with a specific focus on consistencies
or lack of them, that occurs primarily due to inadequate understanding
of oil–brine and rock–oil–brine interactions.
In presenting well-documented scientific information, we expect to
apprise industry and academic researchers that LSWF warrants more-advanced
research based on interdisciplinary approach (bridging the gap between
science and engineering) and the integration of knowledge from R&D
efforts and observations from the atomic to the field scales.