The shortest element of order 7 has length 4 (by shortest I mean takes the least moves in half turn metric). An example is:
$$
R\,U'\,F'\,U
$$
Here are a couple other examples of short elements of order 7. Consider $R\,U'$, which has order 63, therefore $(R\,U')^{9}$ has order 7. Also consider $R\,U$, which has order 105, therefore $(R\,U)^{15}$ has order 7.
The shortest element of order 11 I could find (there may exist a shorter one, but I couldn't find it) has length 10:
$$
(R\,U\,D'\,F\,L^2)^2
$$
Here are some other interesting elements of order 11. Consider $R\,L'\,F'\,U$, which has order 33, therefore $(R\,L'\,F'\,U)^3$ has order 11. Also consider $R\,U\,F^2\,L^2\,U^2$, which has order 33, therefore $(R\,U\,F^2\,L^2\,U^2)^3$ has order 11.
A fun thing to note about elements of order 11 is that, since 11 is prime and is greater than the number of corners, an element of order 11 must act on only the edges (exactly 11 of them, to be more precise).
An interesting website I found (https://www.jaapsch.net/puzzles/cubic3.htm#p34) has counted the number of elements of every order. It turns out that elements of order 11 are the rarest! (Not counting the identity.) Only about 0.000000103% of elements in the Rubik's Cube Group are of order 11. Compare that to the most common order (60), which accounts for 10.6% of all elements.