PCI Express add-in card A PCI Express add-in card fits into a slot of its physical size or larger (with ×16 as the largest used), but may not fit into a smaller PCI Express slot; for example, a ×16 card may not fit into a ×4 or ×8 slot. Some slots use open-ended sockets to permit physically longer cards and negotiate the best available electrical and logical connection. The number of lanes actually connected to a slot may also be fewer than the number supported by the physical slot size. An example is a ×16 slot that runs at ×4, which accepts any ×1, ×2, ×4, ×8 or ×16 card, but provides only four lanes. Its specification may read as "×16 (×4 mode)" or "×16 (×4 signal)", while "mechanical @ electrical" notation (e.g. "×16 @ ×4") is also common. The advantage is that such slots can accommodate a larger range of PCI Express cards without requiring motherboard hardware to support the full transfer rate. Standard mechanical sizes are ×1, ×4, ×8, and ×16. Cards using a number of lanes other than the standard mechanical sizes need to physically fit the next larger mechanical size (e.g. an ×2 card uses the ×4 size, or an ×12 card uses the ×16 size). The cards themselves are designed and manufactured in various sizes. For example,
solid-state drives (SSDs) that come in the form of PCI Express cards often use
HHHL (half height, half length) and
FHHL (full height, half length) to describe the physical dimensions of the card. The concept of "full" and "half" heights and lengths are inherited from Conventional PCI. PCIe slots. In fact, even the methodology of how to measure the cards varies between vendors, with some including the metal bracket size in dimensions and others not. For instance, comparing three high-end video cards released in 2020: a
Sapphire Radeon RX 5700 XT card measures 135 mm in height (excluding the metal bracket), which exceeds the PCIe standard height by 28 mm,
Slot power All PCI express cards may consume up to at (). The amount of +12 V and total power they may consume depends on the form factor and the role of the card: • ×1 cards are limited to 0.5 A at +12V (6 W) and 10 W combined. • ×4 and wider cards are limited to 2.1 A at +12V (25 W) and 25 W combined. • A full-sized ×1 card may draw up to the 25 W limits after initialization and software configuration as a high-power device. • A full-sized ×16 graphics card may draw up to 5.5 A at +12V (66 W) and 75 W combined after initialization and software configuration as a high-power device. The contacts are rated for 15 Amps continuous current. The 48VHPWR connector can carry 720 watts. Later it was removed and an incompatible 48V 1×2 connector was introduced where Sense0 and Sense1 are located farthest from each other.
Power excursion Power excursion refers to short peaks of power draw exceeding the rated maximum (sustained) power level. Since an add-on Engineering Change Notice (ECN) to PCIe-CEM 5.0, the additional power connectors need to be able to handle 100-microsecond power draw at 3× of maximum sustained power, reducing to 1× at the 1-second window level following a logarithmic line. Since PCIe-ECM 5.1, slot power has a similar excursion expansion at 2.5× over 100 μs. In CEM 5.1, the added excursion limit is only provided after software configuration, specifically the Set_Slot_Power_Limit message. The ECN is part of ATX 3.0 and PCIe CEM 5.1 is part of ATX 3.1.
PCI Express Mini Card PCI Express Mini Card and its connector
PCI Express Mini Card (also known as
Mini PCI Express,
Mini PCIe,
Mini PCI-E,
mPCIe, and
PEM), based on PCI Express, is a replacement for the
Mini PCI form factor. It is developed by the
PCI-SIG. The host device supports both PCI Express and
USB 2.0 connectivity, and each card may use either standard. Most laptop computers built between 2005 and 2013 use Mini PCI Express for expansion cards; however, , many vendors have moved toward using the newer
M.2 form factor for this purpose. Due to different dimensions, PCI Express Mini Cards are not physically compatible with standard full-size PCI Express slots; however, passive adapters exist that let them be used in full-size slots.
Electrical interface PCI Express Mini Card edge connectors provide multiple connections and buses: • PCI Express ×1 (with SMBus) • USB 2.0 • Wires to diagnostics LEDs for wireless network (i.e.,
Wi-Fi) status on computer's chassis •
SIM card for
GSM and
WCDMA applications (UIM signals on spec.) • Future extension for another PCIe lane • 1.5 V and 3.3 V power
Mini-SATA (mSATA) variant Despite sharing the Mini PCI Express form factor, an
mSATA slot is not necessarily electrically compatible with Mini PCI Express. For this reason, only certain notebooks are compatible with mSATA drives. Most compatible systems are based on Intel's Sandy Bridge processor architecture, using the Huron River platform. Notebooks such as Lenovo's ThinkPad T, W and X series, released in March–April 2011, have support for an mSATA SSD card in their
WWAN card slot. The ThinkPad Edge E220s/E420s, and the Lenovo IdeaPad Y460/Y560/Y570/Y580 also support mSATA.
Derivative forms Numerous other form factors use, or are able to use, PCIe. These include: • Low-height card •
ExpressCard: Successor to the
PC Card form factor (with ×1 PCIe and USB 2.0; hot-pluggable) • PCI Express ExpressModule: A hot-pluggable modular form factor defined for servers and workstations •
XQD card: A PCI Express-based flash card standard by the
CompactFlash Association with ×2 PCIe •
CFexpress card: A PCI Express-based flash card by the CompactFlash Association in three form factors supporting 1 to 4 PCIe lanes • SD card: The
SD Express bus, introduced in version 7.0 of the SD specification uses a ×1 PCIe link •
XMC: Similar to the
CMC/
PMC form factor (VITA 42.3) •
AdvancedTCA: A complement to
CompactPCI for larger applications; supports serial based backplane topologies •
AMC: A complement to the
AdvancedTCA specification; supports processor and I/O modules on ATCA boards (×1, ×2, ×4 or ×8 PCIe). •
FeaturePak: A tiny expansion card format (43mm × 65 mm) for embedded and small-form-factor applications, which implements two ×1 PCIe links on a high-density connector along with USB, I2C, and up to 100 points of I/O •
Universal IO: A variant from
Super Micro Computer Inc designed for use in low-profile rack-mounted chassis. It has the connector bracket reversed so it cannot fit in a normal PCI Express socket, but it is pin-compatible and may be inserted if the bracket is removed. •
M.2 (formerly known as NGFF) •
M-PCIe brings PCIe 3.0 to mobile devices (such as tablets and smartphones), over the
M-PHY physical layer. •
Serial Attached SCSI-related ports: •
SATA Express,
U.2 (formerly known as SFF-8639), U.3 use the same port •
SlimSAS (SFF-8654) • SFF-TA-1016 (M-XIO connector) • SFF-TA-1026, SFF-TA-1033 The PCIe slot connector can also carry protocols other than PCIe. Some
9xx series Intel chipsets support
Serial Digital Video Out, a proprietary technology that uses a slot to transmit video signals from the host CPU's
integrated graphics instead of PCIe, using a supported add-in. The PCIe transaction-layer protocol can also be used over some other interconnects, which are not electrically PCIe: •
Thunderbolt: A royalty-free (as of Thunderbolt 3) interconnect standard by Intel that combines
DisplayPort and PCIe protocols in a form factor compatible with
Mini DisplayPort. Thunderbolt 3.0 also combines USB 3.1 and uses the
USB-C form factor as opposed to Mini DisplayPort. •
USB4 is an extension of Thunderbolt 3.0. Thunderbolt 4 and Thunderbolt 5 are
profiles of USB4 specifying higher levels of mandatory features. == History and revisions ==