The standard was designed for use within commercial premises that may consist of either a single building or of multiple buildings on a campus. It was optimized for premises that span up to 3km, up to 1km2 office space, with between 50 and 50,000 persons, but can also be applied for installations outside this range.
A major revision was released in November 2017, unifying requirements for commercial, home and industrial networks.
The standard defines several link/channel classes and cabling categories of twisted-pair copper interconnects, which differ in the maximum frequency for which a certain channel performance is required:
Class FA: Up to 1GHz (1000MHz) using Category 7A cable and connectors (Amendments 1 and 2 to ISO/IEC 11801, 2nd Ed.)
Class BCT-B: Up to 1GHz (1000MHz) using with coaxial cabling for BCT applications. (ISO/IEC 11801-1, Edition 1.0 2017-11)
Class I: Up to 2GHz (2000MHz) using Category8.1 cable and connectors (ISO/IEC 11801-1, Edition 1.0 2017-11)
Class II: Up to 2GHz (2000MHz) using Category8.2 cable and connectors (ISO/IEC 11801-1, Edition 1.0 2017-11)
The standard link impedance is 100Ω. (The older 1995 version of the standard also permitted 120Ω and 150Ω in Classes A−C, but this was removed from the 2002 edition.)
The standard defines several classes of optical fiber interconnect:
OM1*: Multimode, 62.5μm core; minimum modal bandwidth of 200MHz·km at 850nm
OM2*: Multimode, 50μm core; minimum modal bandwidth of 500MHz·km at 850nm
OM3: Multimode, 50μm core; minimum modal bandwidth of 2000MHz·km at 850nm
OM4: Multimode, 50μm core; minimum modal bandwidth of 4700MHz·km at 850nm
OM5: Multimode, 50μm core; minimum modal bandwidth of 4700MHz·km at 850nm and 2470MHz·km at 953nm
OS1*: Single-mode, maximum attenuation 1dB/km at 1310 and 1550nm
OS1a: Single-mode, maximum attenuation 1dB/km at 1310, 1383, and 1550nm
OS2: Single-mode, maximum attenuation 0.4dB/km at 1310, 1383, and 1550nm
OM5 fiber is designed for wideband applications using SWDM multiplexing of 4–16 carriers (40G=4λ×10G, 100G=4λ×25G, 400G=4×4λ×25G) in the 850–953nm range.
Class F channel and Category 7 cable are backward compatible with ClassD/Category5e and ClassE/Category6. ClassF features even stricter specifications for crosstalk and system noise than Class E. To achieve this, shielding was added for individual wire pairs and the cable as a whole. Unshielded cables rely on the quality of the twists to protect from EMI. This involves a tight twist and carefully controlled design. Cables with individual shielding per pair such as Category 7 rely mostly on the shield and therefore have pairs with longer twists.[1]
The Category7 cable standard was ratified in 2002, and primarily introduced to support 10 gigabit Ethernet over 100m of copper cabling.[2] Like the earlier standards, it contains four twisted copper wire pairs rated for transmission frequencies of up to 600MHz.[3]
However, in 2006, Category 6A was ratified for Ethernet to allow 10Gbit/s while still using the conventional 8P8C connector. Care is required to avoid signal degradation by mixing cable and connectors not designed for that use, however similar. Most manufacturers of active equipment and network cards have chosen to support the 8P8C for their 10 gigabit Ethernet products on copper and not GG45, ARJ45, or TERA connectors as Class F would have originally called for.[4] Therefore, the Category 6 specification was revised to Category 6A to permit this use; products therefore require a Class EA channel (ie, Cat6A).[citation needed]
As of 2019,[update] some equipment has been introduced which has connectors supporting the Class F (Category 7) channel.[citation needed]
Class FA (Class F Augmented) channels and Category 7A cables, introduced by ISO 11801 Edition 2 Amendment 2 (2010), are defined at frequencies up to 1000MHz.[citation needed]
The intent of the Class FA was to possibly support the future 40gigabit Ethernet: 40GBASE-T. Simulation results have shown that 40 gigabit Ethernet may be possible at 50meters and 100gigabit Ethernet at 15meters.[citation needed] In 2007, researchers at Pennsylvania State University predicted that either 32nm or 22nm circuits would allow for 100gigabit Ethernet at 100meters.[5][6]
However, in 2016, the IEEE 802.3bq working group ratified the amendment 3 which defines 25GBASE-T and 40GBASE-T on Category 8 cabling specified to 2000MHz. The Class FA therefore does not support 40G Ethernet.
As of 2025,[update][needs update] there is no equipment that has connectors supporting the Class FA (Category 7A) channel.
Category7A is not recognized in TIA/EIA.
Category 8
This section needs to be updated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(June 2019)
Cross-section of a Category 8 F/FTP cable
Category 8 was ratified by the TR43 working group under ANSI/TIA 568-C.2-1. It is defined up to 2000MHz and only for distances up to 30m or 36m, depending on the patch cords used.
ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 25/WG 3 developed the equivalent standard ISO/IEC 11801-1:2017/COR 1:2018, with two options:[7][8][9]
Class I channel (Category8.1 cable): minimum cable design U/FTP or F/UTP, fully backward compatible and interoperable with Class EA (Category6A) using 8P8C connectors;
Class II channel (Category8.2 cable): F/FTP or S/FTP minimum, interoperable with ClassFA (Category7A) using TERA or GG45.
Annex E, Acronyms for balanced cables, provides a system to specify the exact construction for both unshielded and shielded balanced twisted pair cables. It uses three letters—U for unshielded, S for braided shielding, and F for foil shielding—to form a two-part abbreviation in the form of xx/xTP, where the first part specifies the type of overall cable shielding, and the second part specifies shielding for individual cable elements.
Common cable types include U/UTP (unshielded cable); U/FTP (individual pair shielding without the overall screen); F/UTP, S/UTP, or SF/UTP (overall screen without individual shielding); and F/FTP, S/FTP, or SF/FTP (overall screen with individual foil shielding).
2017 edition
In November 2017, a new edition was released by ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 25 "Interconnection of information technology equipment" subcommittee. It is a major revision of the standard which has unified several prior standards for commercial, home, and industrial networks, as well as data centers, and defines requirements for generic cabling and distributed building networks.
The new series of standards replaces the former 11801 standard and includes six parts:[7][10][11]
ISO/IEC Standard
Title
Replaces
Description
ISO/IEC 11801-1
Part 1: General requirements
ISO/IEC 11801
Generic cabling requirements for twisted-pair and optical fiber cables
ISO/IEC 11801-2
Part 2: Office premises
ISO/IEC 11801
Cabling for commercial (enterprise) buildings
ISO/IEC 11801-3
Part 3: Industrial premises
ISO/IEC 24702
Cabling for industrial buildings, with applications including automation, process control, and monitoring
ISO/IEC 11801-4
Part 4: Single-tenant homes
ISO/IEC 15018
Cabling for residential buildings, including 1200MHz links for CATV/SATV applications
ISO/IEC 11801-5
Part 5: Data centers
ISO/IEC 24764
Cabling for high-performance networks used by data centers