Advanced Approaches in Drilling Processes and Enhanced Oil Recovery

A special issue of Processes (ISSN 2227-9717). This special issue belongs to the section "Process Control and Monitoring".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: 10 February 2026 | Viewed by 508

Special Issue Editor


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Guest Editor
Department of Petroleum and Chemical Engineering, College of Engineering, Sultan Qaboos University, Muscat, Oman
Interests: enhanced oil recovery; reservoir modelling and simulation; carbon storage
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Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

The global energy demand continues to grow, driven by rising populations and accelerating economic development. This growing demand puts increasing pressure on conventional oil production techniques, which often face limitations due to declining reservoir pressures, complex geological settings, and aging infrastructure. To address these challenges, the industry is turning to innovative drilling technologies and Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR) methods to unlock additional hydrocarbon resources and maximize reservoir performance.

This Special Issue aims to bring together cutting-edge research that advances both drilling processes and EOR technologies, highlighting the synergy between these two critical areas in petroleum engineering. It will cover breakthroughs in experimental investigations, numerical modeling, field applications, and the integration of smart technologies such as AI and machine learning.

We invite researchers to submit original articles and reviews on topics including, but not limited to, the following:

  • Smart Drilling Systems and Automation;
  • Drilling Fluids and Wellbore Stability;
  • Horizontal and Multilateral Drilling Techniques;
  • Real-Time Monitoring and Optimization in Drilling;
  • Smart Water Flooding;
  • Nanotechnology Applications in EOR;
  • CO₂-based EOR Methods;
  • Microbial and Chemical EOR;
  • Low-Salinity and Hybrid EOR Techniques;
  • EOR in Shale and Tight Formations;
  • AI and Data-Driven Approaches in Drilling and EOR;
  • Environmentally Friendly and Sustainable EOR Methods.

This Special Issue will showcase the latest advancements shaping the future of oilfield development, offering insights into more efficient, sustainable, and intelligent solutions for maximizing hydrocarbon recovery. We encourage contributions from academia, research institutions, and industry professionals who are pushing the boundaries of innovation in drilling and EOR.

Dr. Alireza Kazemi
Guest Editor

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Keywords

  • drilling optimization
  • smart drilling technologies
  • enhanced oil recovery (EOR)
  • CO2-EOR
  • low-salinity waterflooding
  • smart water flooding
  • nanotechnology in EOR
  • microbial EOR
  • artificial intelligence in EOR
  • reservoir simulation

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Published Papers (1 paper)

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Research

14 pages, 1119 KB  
Article
Assessment of Initial Wettability Effects on Smart Water Injection Efficiency in Carbonate Reservoirs
by Alireza Kazemi and Masoud Pedrampour
Processes 2025, 13(12), 3842; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13123842 - 27 Nov 2025
Viewed by 289
Abstract
Carbonate reservoirs, which hold a significant portion of the world’s oil reserves, are particularly challenging for enhanced oil recovery (EOR) due to their predominantly oil-wet nature and low permeability. Smart water injection (a low-cost, environmentally friendly EOR method) has demonstrated potential to enhance [...] Read more.
Carbonate reservoirs, which hold a significant portion of the world’s oil reserves, are particularly challenging for enhanced oil recovery (EOR) due to their predominantly oil-wet nature and low permeability. Smart water injection (a low-cost, environmentally friendly EOR method) has demonstrated potential to enhance recovery by modifying rock wettability. While numerous studies have examined smart-water mechanisms, the specific role of initial wettability (including Swi and core preservation state) in controlling its efficiency remains insufficiently quantified. This study addresses this critical gap by systematically investigating how initial wettability affects oil recovery during smart water flooding in a Middle Eastern carbonate reservoir. Core flooding experiments were conducted using brines enriched with potential-determining ions (SO42−, Ca2+, Mg2+) under varying wettability conditions. These tests were performed under controlled initial wettability conditions (Swi and preservation state) to ensure consistent and representative comparison across brine types. Results reveal that initial rock wettability plays a pivotal role in dictating the extent of wettability alteration and oil displacement. In strong oil-wet samples, sulfate-enriched brines induced substantial wettability shifts, significantly enhancing recovery. Conversely, ion saturation effects were observed, limiting further improvement beyond a threshold. Quantitatively, spontaneous water-displacement tests on core 122 at ambient conditions yielded 8.1% of OOIP at Swi = 10%, approximately twice the recovery of the same core in a dry (Swi = 0%) condition. Under reservoir-temperature core-flooding, seawater increased oil recovery from 38.3 to 53.1% OOIP in sample 122 and from 42.2 to 54.1% OOIP in sample 188 relative to formation water, corresponding to incremental gains of about 10–15 percentage points. These findings highlight the critical role of initial wettability characterization in designing effective smart-water EOR strategies. Tailoring brine composition to reservoir-specific wettability conditions enabled recovery improvements of approximately 10–15 percentage points relative to formation water at reservoir temperature. The results provide clear mechanistic insight into ion-specific interactions and offer practical guidance for optimizing smart-water formulation and deployment in carbonate reservoirs. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced Approaches in Drilling Processes and Enhanced Oil Recovery)
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