I am using mongodb with mongoid, for 5-6 months. Have also worked with postgres + AR, MySQL + AR. Have no experience with switching AR to mongoid.
Are you facing any performance issues or expect to face them soon? If not I would advice to avoid the switch, as the decision seems just to be based on coolness factor of Mongodb.
They both have their pros and cons, I like the speed of mongodb, but there are many restrictions on what you can do to achieve that(like no joins, no transaction support and slow field vs. field(updated_at > created_at) queries).
If there are performance issues, I would still recommend to stick with your current system, as the switch might be a big task and it would be better if you spend half the time in optimizing the current system. After reading the question, I get a feeling that you have never worked with mongodb before, there are a many things which can bite you and you would not be fully aware of how to solve them.
However, If you still insist on switching, you need to carefully evaluate you data structure and the way you query them. In relational database, you have the normal forms, which have the advantage that whatever structure you start with, you will roughly reach the same end result once you do the normalization. In mongodb, there are virtually unlimited ways in which you can model your documents. You need to carefully model your documents to avail the benefits of mongodb. The queries you need to run play a very important role in your structuring along with the actual data you want to store.
Keep in mind, you do not have joins in mongodb(can be mitigated, with good modeling). As of now you can not have queries like, field1 = field2, i.e. you can't compare fields, but need to provide a literal to query against.
Take a look at this question: Efficient way to store data in MongoDB: embedded documents vs individual documents. Somebody points the OP to a discussion where embedded documents are recommended, but pretty much similar scenario, OP chooses to go with standalone documents, because of the nature of the queries he will be using to fetch the data.
All I want to say is, it should be a informed decision, which should be taken after you completely model your system with mongodb, have some performance tests with some real data to see if mongodb will solve your problem and should not be based on coolness factor.
UPDATE:
You can do field1 = field2 using $where clause, but its slow and is advised to be avoided.