Humidifying to Improve Ice Quality
Rogers Place in Edmonton, Alberta
Edmonton Oilers improve home ice by humidifying their arena
IMPROVEMENTS IN BOTH ICE AND AIR
" Improved ice quality from
"three out of ten," according to
2016 Oilers player, to second-best the league according to a 2018
vote by players on all NHL teams.
a in
" Improved thermal comfort. Orange
Blue Ice Crew remarked that they felt warmer after air moisture not temperature was increased in the arena.
&
NEW BUILDING, HIGH EXPECTATIONS
The Edmonton Oilers moved to a new downtown arena for the
2016-17 hockey season amid high expectations. Their soon-to-be captain One of 70 atomizing nozzles at the catwalk level of the Rogers Place was healthy again after missing 37
games from injury, average ticket sales were sellouts, and the team would be skating in front of even larger crowds on the high-quality ice that both home and visiting players had come to expect in Edmonton.
LOW RELATIVE HUMIDITY, ROUGH ICE
Upgrades from the old arena to the more spacious Rogers Place made events easier to schedule; more attractive to the talent; and more enjoyable for hockey, music, and wrestling fans. Visitors are first treated to Ford Hall, a 24,000-squarefoot atrium with no wall between it and the arena. While beautiful, Ford Hall has a huge impact on the HVAC systems. In the words of Jason Rimmer, Rogers Place director of engineering and ice operations, "it was like having a hole in the side of our arena. We had to compensate in terms of air movement and temperatures."
When the first winter set in, a phenomenon called sublimation, or evaporation of the ice, began to take place. Winter air below zero °C that was pulled into the building through four air handlers and heated to 20 °C contained barely enough moisture to be measurable, causing indoor relative humidity (RH) as low as single digits. In fact, the ice was turning directly to gas without first becoming water. The result was rough, brittle ice that became even worse when skated on,
causing the puck to bounce and skate blades to chatter.
While it is not a mystery that the cause of ice sublimation is dry air, most arena ice crews do not encounter air as dry as
Rimmer and his crew were seeing. Rimmer knew who to call.
HIGH-PRESSURE ATOMIZING SYSTEM THE OBVIOUS SOLUTION
Rimmer called Darren McPherson, his connection at Kehoe
Equipment Ltd. Kehoe had provided chillers and pumps