| Band | Channel Width | Signal Strength | PHY Rate | iPerf3 TCP Throughput | |------|---------------|----------------|----------|-----------------------| | 2.4 GHz | 20 MHz | -45 dBm | 150 Mbps | 78–95 Mbps | | 2.4 GHz | 40 MHz | -45 dBm | 200 Mbps* | 85–110 Mbps | | 5 GHz | 20 MHz | -48 dBm | 150 Mbps | 90–105 Mbps | | 5 GHz | 40 MHz | -48 dBm | 300 Mbps | 140–170 Mbps | | 5 GHz | 80 MHz | -48 dBm | 433 Mbps | 210–245 Mbps |
Abstract The Realtek 8811CU is a single-chip 802.11ac Wave-1 USB interface controller widely deployed in low-cost wireless LAN adapters. This paper examines its architecture, key features—including 1x1 MIMO, MU-MIMO support, and USB 2.0 interface limitations—as well as real-world performance and driver availability across operating systems. The findings indicate that while the chipset offers adequate throughput for typical consumer applications, its performance is constrained by USB 2.0 bus limitations and fragmented open-source driver support. 1. Introduction The proliferation of USB wireless network interface controllers (NICs) has enabled easy upgrades for legacy systems and compact devices lacking internal Wi-Fi. Among these, Realtek’s 8811CU has gained popularity due to its low bill-of-materials cost and compliance with the 802.11ac standard. It is marketed as supporting up to 433 Mbps on the 5 GHz band and 150 Mbps on 2.4 GHz. This paper provides a systematic analysis of the chipset’s capabilities, hardware architecture, and practical usage considerations. 2. Hardware Architecture The RTL8811CU integrates an 802.11ac PHY, a MAC, and a USB 2.0 interface in a single 48-pin QFN package. realtek 8811cu wireless lan 802.11ac usb nic
(conceptual): Antenna → RF Front-end → PHY Processor → MAC → USB 2.0 Controller → Host 3. Key Features and Limitations 3.1 802.11ac Wave-1 Support The 8811CU supports the foundational elements of 802.11ac: 80 MHz channel bandwidth, 256-QAM, and optional MU-MIMO (downlink only). However, it lacks Wave-2 features such as 160 MHz channels or 4x4 MIMO. 3.2 USB 2.0 Bottleneck Despite a theoretical PHY rate of 433 Mbps, the USB 2.0 interface caps effective throughput at ~280–320 Mbps due to protocol overhead (8/10b encoding, packet framing). Thus, actual TCP throughput typically peaks at 200–260 Mbps. 3.3 Power Consumption Peak current draw is approximately 250–300 mA at 5 V, making it suitable for most USB 2.0 ports without external power. 3.4 Driver Stack Realtek provides closed-source Linux drivers and Windows INF-based drivers. Open-source support is incomplete; the rtl88x2bu driver (reverse-engineered) offers partial functionality but lacks Bluetooth coexistence support (the 8811CU does not include Bluetooth, unlike the 8821CU). 4. Performance Evaluation Tests were conducted using an RTL8811CU-based adapter (TP-Link Archer T2U Nano) connected to an ASUS RT-AX88U router in an interference-free environment. | Band | Channel Width | Signal Strength