Panasonic to Sponsor MIT Solar Vehicle Team
01 August 2009 - 1:58AM
PR Newswire (US)
Panasonic's High-Capacity Lithium-Ion Batteries Support MIT Student
Team's Entry in Global Green Challenge Solar Car Race in Australia
SECAUCUS, N.J., July 31 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Panasonic
Corporation (NYSE:PC) today announced its support of the Solar
Electric Vehicle Team at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(MIT SEVT), in their participation of the Global Green Challenge
(GGC), to be held in October 2009 in Australia. Under the
sponsorship agreement, Panasonic is providing the MIT SEVT team
with its high-capacity (2.9 Ah), lithium-ion batteries to be used
in the team's vehicle. Panasonic will have the right for its logo
to appear on the body of the vehicle. (Photo:
http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20090731/NY55032 ) The Global
Green Challenge evolved from the World Solar Challenge, a solar car
race first held in 1987 in Australia. Today, the Global Green
Challenge includes the World Solar Challenge for solar powered
cars, and the Eco Challenge for other types of environmentally
conscious production cars including fuel cell, electric and hybrid
vehicles. Teams from universities, corporations and other groups
from around the world will compete, driving across the Australian
continent from Darwin in the north, to Adelaide in the south, over
a distance of 3,021 km. The MIT SEVT student team will compete in
the World Solar Challenge with a solar powered car using Panasonic
lithium-ion batteries to store its solar generated power.
Separately, Panasonic will provide the same high-capacity,
lithium-ion batteries to a team from Japan's Tokai University which
is also competing in the same category. Solar cars use motors which
run on electricity generated by solar panels. Excess electricity is
stored in their batteries. The batteries supply electricity to the
motor when the electricity from the solar panel is insufficient,
due to overcast skies or at night. In other words, the performance
of solar cars in races depends not only on the capability of their
solar panels, but also the capacity of the batteries and the weight
of the battery module. Panasonic is providing both teams with its
18650-type cylindrical high-capacity, lithium-ion battery cells
which are then mounted in arrays within a storage battery module.
The same type of battery cells are widely used in laptop computers.
Because this type of battery, which features the highest level of
energy density, is light and high capacity, it lasts longer and
enables making battery modules lighter. Both teams selected the
Panasonic batteries to get an edge in the race that will be run
under harsh weather conditions. Panasonic, which is committed to
environmental protection, believes the Global Green Challenge will
present an opportunity for the company to explore new applications
of its high-capacity, lithium-ion batteries. More information on
Panasonic's batteries is available at
http://panasonic.net/corporate/segments/ec/. About Panasonic
Panasonic Corporation is a worldwide leader in the development and
manufacture of electronic products for a wide range of consumer,
business, and industrial needs. Based in Osaka, Japan, the company
recorded consolidated net sales of 7.77 trillion yen (US$78.4
billion) for the year ended March 31, 2009. The company's shares
are listed on the Tokyo, Osaka, Nagoya and New York (NYSE:PC) stock
exchanges. For more information on the company and the Panasonic
brand, visit the company's website at http://panasonic.net/.
DATASOURCE: Panasonic CONTACT: Jim Reilly of Panasonic,
+1-201-392-6067, ; or Blayne Murphy of Cohn & Wolfe for
Panasonic, +1-212-798-9763, Web Site: http://www.panasonic.com/
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