Ripple’s blockchain, the
XRP Ledger (XRPL), uses validator nodes within the
network to perform consensus operations and verify all
transactions taking place. Once a validator checks and
validates a transaction, it gets added to the public
ledger as a new block.
New blocks within the XRPL
get created every 3-5 seconds - the time taken to
confirm a new set of transactions. According to Ripple’s
official website, as of April 2022, the XRP Ledger has
36 validators. The company itself runs six of them,
accounting for 16% of validators.
XRP has a far higher
throughput than several of its peers, including
Bitcoin, Ethereum and
Litecoin, making it one of the most
attractive options for mainstream financial institutions
to turn to when enabling blockchain-based global payment
transfers. XRP boasts a 1,500 TPS (transactions per
second) processing speed and has the ability to match
payments leader Visa in terms of throughput.
It also boasts a far more
energy efficient operation than leading Proof-of-Work
blockchains, giving it one more distinct advantage when
it comes to mainstream adoption. Settlements on the XRP
Ledger happen in 3.90 seconds, and have extremely low
transaction fees of less than $0.00020.