The Wi-Fi standards. The IEEE 802.11 standards cover every version of Wi-Fi, and the Wi-Fi Alliance certifies products. Wi-Fi is the wireless counterpart to "wired" Ethernet, and Wi-Fi and Ethernet co-exist in every home and business.
The first 802.11 specification was introduced in 1997 (Wi-Fi 0), and several incompatible products became available. In 1999, 802.11b became the first Wi-Fi standard widely supported.
All versions of 802.11 use OFDM encoding except for 802.11b, which uses DSSS (see
OFDM and
spread spectrum). For details about each standard, see below and
802.11 versions.
Infrastructure and Ad Hoc Modes
In "infrastructure" mode, Wi-Fi devices transmit to an "access point" (base station), which may be a stand-alone unit or built into a wireless router. In "ad hoc" mode, two devices communicate peer-to-peer without an access point in between (see
Wi-Fi Direct).
Throughput Varies
Speed is distance dependent. The farther away the device from the base station, the lower the speed. Also, the actual throughput is generally half of the rated speed because 802.11 uses collision "avoidance" (see
CSMA/CA) rather than Ethernet's collision "detection" method (see
CSMA/CD). For example, a 600 Mbps rating may yield 300 Mbps or less in real data throughput. For more about Wi-Fi networks, see
wireless LAN and
Wi-Fi. See
Wi-Fi hotspot,
802.11 timeline,
wireless router,
ISM band,
802.16 and
802.15.
802.11 SPECIFICATIONS
Max
Wi-Fi Bands Speed Channel Width
# IEEE (GHz) (Mbps) (MHz)
7 11be 2.4/5/6 46120 20/40/80/160/320
6e 11ax 6 9608 20/40/80/160
6 11ax 2.4/5 9608 20/40/80/160
5 11ac 5 6933 20/40/80/160
4 11n 2.4/5 600 20/40
3 11g 2.4 54 20
2 11a 5 11 20
1 11b 2.4 2 20
0 11 2.4 1 20
Stand-Alone Access Points
Wi-Fi access points (APs) are central base stations with antennas. Stand-alone models come in ceiling mounted (middle) and desktop (bottom) versions. They are often not found in homes because an AP is built into the router (see
wireless router).
Wi-Fi Adapters
The adapter (top) adds Wi-Fi to any computer via USB, while the card on the bottom plugs into a PCI slot inside a desktop computer. (Images courtesy of D-Link Corporation and TP-LINK Technologies Co., Ltd.)