Dancing on Clouds First Dance with the Help of Dry Ice Smoke Machine
We are very excited to host our newly wedded couples to enjoy their first dance on the clouds. Scientists designed Dry Ice Smoke Machine (AKA fog machine, fog generator, or smoke machine) to create thick clouds of fog that lie close to the ground and dissipate as they rise. It is used to create the ‘Dancing on the Clouds’ effect.
Scientists create this machine using either dry ice compressed liquid CO2, liquid nitrogen, or more recently liquid air. Your guests will be watching you in awe with this breathtaking effect as you dance together.
The Dry Ice produces a low level thick artificial fog that? disperses without rising, which makes you feel on the clouds and it is completely safe and odorless. People use this ‘fog’ most commonly in professional entertainment applications.
HOW DOES A DRY ICE SMOKE MACHINE CREATE THE FOG?
The machine creates the fog by vaporizing proprietary water and glycol-based or glycerin-based fluids or through the atomization of mineral oil. This fluid (often referred to colloquially as fog juice) vaporizes or atomizes inside the fog machine. Upon exiting the fog machine and mixing with cooler outside air the vapor condenses, resulting in a thick visible fog.
Scientists heat water to or near boiling in a suitable container (for example: a 55-gallon drum with water heater coils in it), and then dropping in one or more pieces of dry ice to create the effects. Because at standard temperature and pressure carbon dioxide is a gas, the carbon dioxide sublimates and instantly produces a gas, condensing water vapor and creating a thick white fog. Liquid nitrogen (N2) can be used in a similar manner to dry ice. In either case, a fan placed at the top of the container directs the fog where it is needed.
Liquid air is an alternative to using liquid nitrogen in generating low lying fog effects. Liquid air is composed of N2 and O2 mixed in a ratio of 79% nitrogen and 21% oxygen stored as a liquid in insulated cylinders. This ratio of nitrogen to oxygen is the same as that of atmospheric air, and indeed liquid air may be fabricated by simply liquefying atmospheric air. The machine can use liquid air as a direct replacement for liquid nitrogen in chilled-fog effects and intends to use in the same manner in the same equipment. Its key advantage over liquid nitrogen is that it presents no asphyxiation hazard, since it contains oxygen.
WE CAN BRING YOU THE CLOUDS