Wi-Fi generationsvte
Gen.IEEE standardAdopt.Link rate (Mbit/s)RF (GHz)
2.456
Wi‑Fi 1802.1119971–2
Wi‑Fi 2802.11b19991–11
Wi‑Fi 2G802.11a6–54
Wi‑Fi 3802.11g2003
Wi‑Fi 4802.11n20096.5–600
Wi‑Fi 5802.11ac20136.5–6,933
Wi‑Fi 6802.11ax20210.4–9,608
Wi‑Fi 6E
Wi‑Fi 7802.11be20240.4–23,059
Wi‑Fi 8802.11bnTBA

IEEE 802.11b-1999 or 802.11b is an amendment to the IEEE 802.11 wireless networking specification that extends throughput up to 11 Mbit/s using the same 2.4 GHz band. A related amendment was incorporated into the IEEE 802.11-2007 standard.

802.11 is a set of IEEE standards that govern wireless networking transmission methods. They are commonly used today in their 802.11a, 802.11b, 802.11g, 802.11n, 802.11ac and 802.11ax versions to provide wireless connectivity in the home, office and some commercial establishments.

Description

802.11b has a maximum raw data rate of 11 Mbit/s and uses the same CSMA/CA media access method defined in the original standard. Due to the CSMA/CA protocol overhead, in practice the maximum 802.11b throughput that an application can achieve is about 5.9 Mbit/s using TCP and 7.1 Mbit/s using UDP.

802.11b products appeared on the market in mid-1999, since 802.11b is a direct extension of the DSSS (Direct-sequence spread spectrum) modulation technique defined in the original standard. The Apple iBook was the first mainstream computer sold with optional 802.11b networking. Technically, the 802.11b standard uses complementary code keying (CCK) as its modulation technique, which uses a specific set of length 8 complementary codes that was originally designed for OFDM but was also suitable for use in 802.11b because of its low autocorrelation properties. The dramatic increase in throughput of 802.11b (compared to the original standard) along with simultaneous substantial price reductions led to the rapid acceptance of 802.11b as the definitive wireless LAN technology as well as to the formation of the Wi-Fi Alliance.

802.11b devices suffer interference from other products operating in the 2.4 GHz band. Devices operating in the 2.4 GHz range include: microwave ovens, Bluetooth devices, baby monitors and cordless telephones. Interference issues and user density problems within the 2.4 GHz band have become a major concern and frustration for users.

Code Length bitsModulation typeSymbol RateBit per SymbolData rate (Mbit/s)
11-bit Barker codeBPSK11/11 = 111
11-bit Barker codeDBPSK11/11 = 122
8-bit CCKQPSK11/8 = 1.37545.5
8-bit CCKDQPSK11/8 = 1.375811

Range

802.11b is used in a point-to-multipoint configuration, wherein an access point communicates via an omnidirectional antenna with mobile clients within the range of the access point. Typical range depends on the radio frequency environment, output power and sensitivity of the receiver. Allowable bandwidth is shared across clients in discrete channels. A directional antenna focuses transmit and receive power into a smaller field which reduces interference and increases point-to-point range. Designers of such installations who wish to remain within the law must however be careful about legal limitations on effective radiated power.

Some 802.11b cards operate at 11 Mbit/s, but scale back to 5.5, then to 2, then to 1 Mbit/s (also known as Adaptive Rate Selection) in order to decrease the rate of re-broadcasts that result from errors.

Channels and frequencies

802.11b/g channels in 2.4 GHz band
channel to frequency map
ChannelCenter frequencyFrequency deltaChannel widthOverlaps channels
12.412 GHz5 MHz2.401–2.423 GHz2-5
22.417 GHz5 MHz2.406–2.428 GHz1,3-6
32.422 GHz5 MHz2.411–2.433 GHz1–2,4-7
42.427 GHz5 MHz2.416–2.438 GHz1–3,5-8
52.432 GHz5 MHz2.421–2.443 GHz1–4,6-9
62.437 GHz5 MHz2.426–2.448 GHz2–5,7-10
72.442 GHz5 MHz2.431–2.453 GHz3–6,8-11
82.447 GHz5 MHz2.436–2.458 GHz4–7,9-12
92.452 GHz5 MHz2.441–2.463 GHz5–8,10-13
102.457 GHz5 MHz2.446–2.468 GHz6–9,11-13
112.462 GHz5 MHz2.451–2.473 GHz7-10,12-13
122.467 GHz5 MHz2.456–2.478 GHz8-11,13-14
132.472 GHz5 MHz2.461–2.483 GHz9-12, 14
142.484 GHz12 MHz2.473–2.495 GHz12-13

Note: Channel 14 is only allowed in Japan, Channels 12 & 13 are allowed in most parts of the world. More information can be found in the List of WLAN channels.

Comparison

vte802.11 network standards
Frequency range, or typePHYProtocolRelease dateFreq­uency bandChannel widthStream data rateMax. MIMO streamsModulationApprox. range
In­doorOut­door
(GHz)(MHz)(Mbit/s)
1–7GHzDSSS, FHSS802.11-1997June 19972.4221, 2—N/aDSSS, FHSS20 m (66 ft)100 m (330 ft)
HR/DSSS802.11bSeptember 19992.4221, 2, 5.5, 11—N/aCCK, DSSS35 m (115 ft)140 m (460 ft)
OFDM802.11aSeptember 199955, 10, 206, 9, 12, 18, 24, 36, 48, 54 (for 20MHz bandwidth, divide by 2 and 4 for 10 and 5MHz)—N/aOFDM35 m (115 ft)120 m (390 ft)
802.11jNovember 20044.9, 5.0??
802.11yNovember 20083.7?5,000 m (16,000 ft)
802.11pJuly 20105.91,000 m (3,300 ft)
802.11bdDecember 20225.9, 601,000 m (3,300 ft)
ERP-OFDM802.11gJune 20032.438 m (125 ft)140 m (460 ft)
HT-OFDM802.11n (Wi-Fi 4)October 20092.4, 520Up to 288.84MIMO-OFDM (64-QAM)70 m (230 ft)250 m (820 ft)
40Up to 600
VHT-OFDM802.11ac (Wi-Fi 5)December 2013520Up to 6938DL MU-MIMO OFDM (256-QAM)35 m (115 ft)?
40Up to 1,600
80Up to 3,467
160Up to 6,933
HE-OFDMA802.11ax (Wi-Fi 6, Wi-Fi 6E)May 20212.4, 5, 620Up to 1,1478UL/DL MU-MIMO OFDMA (1024-QAM)30 m (98 ft)120 m (390 ft)
40Up to 2,294
80Up to 5,500
80+80Up to 11,000
EHT-OFDMA802.11be (Wi-Fi 7)Sep 20242.4, 5, 680Up to 5,7648UL/DL MU-MIMO OFDMA (4096-QAM)30 m (98 ft)120 m (390 ft)
160 (80+80)Up to 11,500
240 (160+80)Up to 14,282
320 (160+160)Up to 23,059
UHR802.11bn (Wi-Fi 8)May 2028 ()2.4, 5, 6320Up to 23,0598Multi-link MU-MIMO OFDM (4096-QAM)??
WUR802.11baOctober 20212.4, 54, 200.0625, 0.25 (62.5kbit/s, 250kbit/s)—N/aOOK (multi-carrier OOK)??
mmWave (WiGig)DMG802.11adDecember 2012602,160 (2.16GHz)Up to 8,085 (8Gbit/s)—N/aOFDM, singlecarrier, low-power single carrier3.3 m (11 ft)?
802.11ajApril 2018601,080Up to 3,754 (3.75Gbit/s)—N/asinglecarrier, low-power single carrier??
CMMG802.11ajApril 201845540, 1,080Up to 15,015 (15Gbit/s)4OFDM, singlecarrier??
EDMG802.11ayJuly 202160Up to 8,640 (8.64GHz)Up to 303,336 (303Gbit/s)8OFDM, singlecarrier10m (33ft)100m (328ft)
Sub 1 GHz (IoT)TVHT802.11afFebruary 20140.054– 0.796, 7, 8Up to 568.94MIMO-OFDM??
S1G802.11ahMay 20170.7, 0.8, 0.91–16Up to 8.67 (@2MHz)4??
Light (Li-Fi)LC (VLC/OWC)802.11bbNovember 2023800–1000 nm20Up to 9.6Gbit/s—N/aO-OFDM??
IR (IrDA)802.11-1997June 1997850–900 nm?1, 2—N/aPPM??
802.11 Standard rollups
802.11-2007 (802.11ma)March 20072.4, 5Up to 54DSSS, OFDM
802.11-2012 (802.11mb)March 20122.4, 5Up to 150DSSS, OFDM
802.11-2016 (802.11mc)December 20162.4, 5, 60Up to 866.7 or 6,757DSSS, OFDM
802.11-2020 (802.11md)December 20202.4, 5, 60Up to 866.7 or 6,757DSSS, OFDM
802.11-2024 (802.11me)September 20242.4, 5, 6, 60Up to 9,608 or 303,336DSSS, OFDM

See also

Notes

External links

  • (PDF). 1999-02-11. Archived from (PDF) on April 8, 2003.
  • (PDF). 2002-01-30. Archived from (PDF) on December 2, 2003.