Excellent troubleshooting, thank you. Not everyone has the patience to run Safe Mode that long. This is good news though, it means that your BSODs are unlikely to be due to failing hardware.
Now what I'd like you to try is a
clean boot of Windows. The difference with Safe Mode is that in a clean boot you'll be loading the full Windows system and all Windows drivers, but we'll deliberately not be loading any third-party drivers by manually deselecting them all in msconfig and by preventing third-party apps from auto-starting (but do make a note of which ones were enabled to start with!). What will boot will be your full Windows system and nothing else.
Now test the system again as you did earlier, again we're trying to make it BSOD, so please give it plenty of time, and a couple of hours at least. Be aware that some devices may not work properly (or at all) because their third-party drivers are not loaded, and some features may not work because the apps didn't auto-start. Do your best to test it in this state and do try and make it BSOD.
Once you're certain that it's not BSODing in this clean state we're going to clean boot again, but now gradually enable some of the third party drivers. Leave all of the auto-start apps disabled until we've tested with all the drivers. You can speed this testing up by using a 'boolean sort'; when you enable third-party drivers just enable (check) half of them and restart. If it BSODs then the problem driver is in the half you enabled, but if it doesn't BSOD (after a couple of hours of testing) then you know that all those drivers are good.
Now, if it didn't BSOD then enable half of the remaining third-party drivers and restart. But if it did BSOD then disable half of the drivers you enabled and restart.
I hope you can see that by halving the number of suspect drivers each time you can quickly home in on the flaky one. This 'boolean sort' is a handy technique that you can apply to many things, even outside of computing!
Finally, if it doesn't BSOD with all third-party drivers enabled (and a couple of hours of testing) then use a boolean sort on the auto-start apps to find the one that makes it BSOD.
Regarding the Intel Rapid Storage Technology driver, it is really only needed if you run your drives in a RAID configuration - and you don't. I would suggest you're best option is to uninstall it completely. This is not a difficult process, here are
full directions from Microsoft on how to do that. Although these directions don't explicitly reference Windows 11 the process is the same.