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IEEE 802.11

Last updated Feb 8, 2023

A part of the IEEE 802 standards (relating to LANs) that specifies the set of media access control and physical layer protocols for implementing WLANs. Most commonly known to be the standard employed by the Wi-Fi Alliance known as Wi-Fi.

# IEEE 802.11a–802.11be

The Wi-Fi Alliance came up with a consumer-friendly generation numbering scheme in 2018. It denotes a numerical numbering system for different substandards employing the IEEE 802.11 protocol. The table below shows the details of each generation:

Wi-Fi generationIEEE standardFrequency bandMaximum transmission rateYear introduced
Wi-Fi 1802.11b2.4 GHz11 Mbps1999
Wi-Fi 2802.11a5 GHz54 Mbps1999
Wi-Fi 3802.11g2.4 GHz54 Mbps2003
Wi-Fi 4802.11n2.4 GHz, 5 GHz150 Mbps per stream, 4 antennae2009
Wi-Fi 5802.11ac5 GHz867 Mbps per stream, 8 antennae2014
Wi-Fi 6802.11ax2.4 GHz, 5 GHz, 6 GHz9608 Mbps2019, 2021 (6 GHz)
Wi-Fi 7802.11be2.4 GHz, 5 GHz, 6 GHz46120 Mbps2024

# IEEE 802.11s

The IEEE 802.11s standard enables wireless devices to conect to each other, creating a mesh network. The Wi-Fi Alliance created Wi-Fi EasyMesh that exists under this standard, bringing interoperability to mesh Wi-Fi hardware.