A PCIe card (PCI Express expansion card) is a hardware device based on the PCI Express high-speed serial bus standard, designed to connect a computer motherboard to various high-performance peripherals. Its primary function is to provide the system with additional capabilities or to enhance existing performance, making it particularly well-suited for scenarios requiring high-bandwidth and low-latency data transmission.
Graphics Processing
Installation of a discrete graphics card (GPU) for tasks such as gaming, 3D rendering, and video editing.
High-Speed Storage Expansion
NVMe Solid-State Drives (SSDs): Utilizing PCIe slots or M.2 interfaces (which are essentially PCIe lanes) to achieve read and write speeds significantly faster than those of SATA SSDs.
Network Communication
10 Gigabit / 2.5G / 10G Network Interface Cards (NICs): Meeting the demands of data centers, high-definition video streaming, and high-speed file transfers.
Industrial and Embedded Applications
Data Acquisition Cards: Convert analog signals from sensors into digital signals, used for industrial monitoring and laboratory testing.










