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PCI Express

A high-speed hardware interface from Intel for connecting peripheral devices. PCI
Express (PCIe) was introduced in 2002, and by the mid-2000s, motherboards had at
least one PCIe slot for the graphics card. PCIe is also used for hard drives, SSDs, Wi-
Fi and Ethernet. Introduced in 2002 as "Third Generation I/O" (3GIO), PCIe
superseded both PCI and PCI-X.

Switched Architecture - Multiple Lanes


Rather than the shared bus of PCI, PCIe provides a switched architecture of up to 32
independent, serial "lanes" that can transfer in parallel, designated 1x to 32x. The
switch backplane determines the total bandwidth, and cards and motherboards are
compatible between versions.

Internal and External for Laptops


A mini version of PCIe was developed for laptops (see Mini PCI Express) and
ExpressCard and Thunderbolt interfaces extend PCIe outside the computer (see
external GPU). For PCIe/PCI comparisons, see PCI-SIG. See PCI, ExpressCard,
Thunderbolt and PCI-X.

Data Transfer
PCI Express (Bytes/Sec)
Version 1 Lane 16 Lanes

1.0 250 MBps 4 GBps


2.0 500 MBps 8 GBps
3.0 1 GBps** 16 GBps**
4.0 2 GBps** 32 GBps**
** = rounded
Different Size Slots
PCIe is not compatible with PCI or AGP. Slots are color coded on the motherboard.
Parallel Transfer in Serial Form
Each lane is an independent single-bit serial channel on the PCIe backplane.
A PCIe Motherboard
This Asus motherboard has three x16 PCIe slots for x16, x8 or x4 cards and four x1
slots. (Image courtesy of ASUStek Computer Inc.)
PCIe Replaced AGP for Graphics
The AGP slot gave way to an x16 PCIe slot for the graphics card. (Image courtesy of
NVIDIA Corporation.)

PCIe on an M.2 Card


This is a 960GB PCIe SSD contained on an 80x20mm M.2 card. See M.2.

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