1. Introduction
In this article,
R represents an associative ring with identity and
represents an unital left module over
R. Recall that for some
and
, if
, then
a is said be nilpotent element in
R. The notation
denotes the set of all nilpotent elements in
R. If
,
R is called a reduced ring. For a polynomial ring
over
R, Armendariz [
4] proved a very interesting result that if
R is reduced, then the coefficients
for each
whenever
and
with coefficients in
R satisfy
. Inspired by this result, Rege and Chhawchharia [
11] introduced a new class of rings named Armendariz ring as a generalization of reduced rings and provided a sufficient class of rings which are Armendariz but not reduced. A ring
R is called Armendariz if
, whenever
and
in
satisfies
. R. Antoine [
3] introduced nil-Armendariz rings and studied the structure of a nilpotent class in non-commutative rings extensively. A ring
R is called nil-Armendariz if
, whenever
and
in
satisfy
. The class of Armendariz and nil-Armendariz rings and their relation with other classes of rings are briefly studied in [
3,
4,
9,
10]. In [
9], Liu and Zhao introduced weak Armendariz rings to generalize nil-Armendariz rings. A ring
R is weak Armendariz if
, whenever
and
in
satisfy
. Thus, we have the chain: reduced ring ⟹ Armendariz ring ⟹ nil-Armendariz ring ⟹ weak Armendariz, but the converse is not necessarily true. In the field of extensions, Lee and Zhou [
8] extended the reduced property to modules. A module
is said to be reduced If any of the identical conditions listed below hold:
- (1)
If for and , we have , then .
- (2)
Whenever , then .
Similarly
is called rigid if
holds true whenever
for
and
. A module
is called Armendariz if
whenever
and
satisfies
. Lee and Zhou recorded many examples of Armendariz modules [
8] and Rege and Buhphang [
5]. They also conducted a comparative study of Armendariz, reduced, and semicommutative modules. A module
is called semicommutative if, whenever
for some
and
, it implies
. Over the past few decades, many algebraists have been generalizing concepts defined for non-commutative rings to modules. In this context, as early as 2014, Ssevvirri and Groenewald [
12] proposed the idea of nilpotent elements for modules. An element
is called nilpotent if either
or
but
for some
and
. The set of all nilpotent elements in
is denoted by
. In 2019, Ansari and Singh conducted a comparative study of nilpotent elements and established some crucial relationships between nilpotent elements and other classes of modules. They proved that if
is reduced, then
does not contain non-zero nilpotent elements. Since both nil-Armendariz and weak Armendariz concepts in ring theory are defined through `nilpotency conditions’ on elements, extending these concepts to modules is straightforward. In this direction, Ansari and Singh [
1] defined a weak Armendariz module. A module
is called weak Armendariz if whenever
and
satisfy
, then,
for each
. This new concept further helped study the structure of nilpotent elements and their connection with other subclasses of modules. Recall that an element
is a torsion element if
for some non-zero
. The set of all torsion elements of
is represented by
. In [
12], Ssevvirri and Groenewald raised an important question regarding the conditions under which the set of nilpotent elements forms a submodule of
. In this article, we noted some conditions on the ring that help make the set of nilpotent elements a submodule.
In the realm of non-commutative rings, extensive studies have been conducted on the generalization of reduced rings, namely the classes of Armendariz and semi commutative rings. However, such developments have yet to be extended to modules due to the absence of various subclass definitions. Therefore, the primary objective of this article is to introduce a new concept called nil-Armendariz modules as an independent category within the class of Armendariz modules, serving as a generalization of reduced modules within the context of the nilpotent class. We examine various properties of this extension and conduct a comparative study between concepts developed in rings and their counterparts in modules.
Among the significant results, we demonstrate the existence of a large class of nil-Armendariz modules but not Armendariz, and vice versa. Additionally, we establish that for a submodule N of , the quotient module is nil-Armendariz if and only N is a subset of the nilpotent class of . We also prove that for a module , matrix module is nil-Armendariz over . Furthermore, we explore the structure of the nilpotent class and identify certain conditions under which these classes form a submodule. Additionally, we demonstrate that nil-Armendariz modules maintain closure under localizations.
2. Results on Nil-Armendariz Modules
We begin with the following definition.
Definition 1. A left R-module M is called nil-Armendariz if whenever for and , then .
From the above definition, we can easily infer that the nil-Armendariz module class is closed under submodules and that every reduced module is nil-Armendariz. Moreover, all nil-Armendariz modules are weak Armendariz. However, Proposition 2.3 and 2.5, provided later in this article, illustrates that the converse is not true in both cases. Additionally, in the realm of ring theory, it is straightforward to verify that all Armendariz rings are nil-Armendariz. Extending these concepts to module theory may lead one to suspect that all Armendariz modules are nil-Armendariz; however, this assumption does not hold. For instance, consider a module . We know that is a module over . Any matrix can be expressed as , where represents the elementary matrices.
Lemma 1. Let M be a left R-module. Then, .
Proof. Consider any non-zero matrix . This implies at least one for some . Thus, we have two cases as follows:
- (a)
Suppose for . Then we can take . Thus, we can easily see that , but .
- (b)
Suppose for . Then we can take such that and . Thus, we can easily see that , but .
□
Proposition 1. For a module , the matrix module is nil-Armendariz over for , but it is not Armendariz.
Proof.
is nil-Armendariz, which easily follows from Lemma 1. Now consider, and for any , . Clearly, we see although . Thus, is not Armendariz over . Since is embedded as a submodule in for , we can conclude that is not Armendariz. □
Here we have noted an important result regarding the nilpotency of as an -module.
Lemma 2. For any , .
Proof. Let us suppose that . Then ∃ such that but . This implies for some . Thus which implies . Hence a contradiction. □
Proposition 2. For any , the -module is Armendariz but not nil-Armendariz.
Proof. Consider and . Then we have . Clearly, and . Thus, and hence . However, by Lemma 2, . Thus, is not a nil-Armendariz module, but it is an Armendariz module (see Lemma 2.6 in [4]). □
Next, we record some conditions under which the above newly defined concept is equivalent to Armendariz module.
Proposition 3. For a reduced module , the statement given below are equivalent:
-
(1)
is Armendariz.
-
(2)
is nil-Armendariz.
-
(3)
is weak Armendariz.
Proof. Since the module is reduced, by Corollary 2.11 in [?], we have . Hence, the proof follows straightforwardly. □
Proposition 4. Let R be a reduced ring. If is torsion free, then the statement given below are equivalent:
-
(1)
is Armendariz.
-
(2)
is Nil-Armendariz.
-
(3)
is weak Armendariz.
Proof. The proof follows easily from Proposition 2.7 in [
2]. □
Next, for a module , we provide a large class of submodules of the matrix module , which are both Armendariz and nil-Armendariz. For this purpose, we denote as the ring of upper triangular matrices over R. For a left R-module and , let . For elementary matrices , let for . We consider and . Then forms a ring, and forms a left module over .
There exists a ring isomorphism defined as , and an abelian group isomorphism defined as , such that for all and .
In [
13], Corollary 3.7, Zhang and Chen proved that
is a reduced module if and only if
is Armendariz over
. Thus, for a reduced module
, we find a larger class of Armendariz submodules of
over
. We recall the following notations from [
7],
Let
and for
, consider
and for
Let
and
For example,
For
,
, we write
to mean that
for
.
Lemma 3.([7], Lemma 1.2)For and , let and where are the -entries of for and are the -entries of for . Then and . If is Armendariz and for all , then for all .
The first main result of this paper is the following:
Theorem 1. Let be a reduced module. For , the following statements are true:
-
(1)
is an Armendariz module.
-
(2)
is a nil-Armendariz module.
Proof.
- (1)
-
Let
and
satisfy
. Here we identify
with
and
with
canonically. Then
and
where
and
. We will show that
for all
. Firstly notice that
and
has following properties:
Now
implies
We know that
is reduced module if and only if
is reduced([
8], Theorem 1.6). Thus from
we get
and hence
. Multiplying by
from left side to
, we get
which implies
, thus
. similarly multiplying by
from left to
, we get
, hence
, which implies
. Again multiplying
to the same equation we get
, this implies
and hence
. Similarly Continuing this process, we get
This implies
for all
with
where
Again from
, we have
By applying the same process of left multiplications and using the earlier results obtained in Equation (
2), we conclude that for
and with
for
Thus from equation (
3) and (
4), we get
for
.
Now for some
, assume the condition
holds true for
and
. Thus it is sufficient to show that for each
, the equation
holds true. Again
gives
Thus
Again by induction hypothesis and using results obtained in (2), (3) and (4), we obtained the following:
- (i)
- (a)
, for ; .
- (b)
-
, for ; .
⋮
- (c)
, for ; .
- (ii)
, for , and .
Thus
and left multiplication process implies each left side component of Equation (
5) equals to zero. Hence
for
. Hence mathematical induction gives
. Thus
is Armendariz module.
- (2)
By using the calculations as in Lemma 1, It is easy to verified that is a nil module over . Thus, it is nil-Armendariz.
□
Theorem 2. Let be a reduced module. For , the following statements are true:
-
(1)
is an Armendariz module over .
-
(2)
is nil-Armendariz module over .
Proof. The proof of this theorem is almost similar to Theorem 1(1) above. However, for more illustration, we have demonstrated it as follows:
- (1)
-
Consider
for some
and
. Firstly we notice that
and
have following properties:
Now we have
By applying Similar left multiplication with equation (
6) and (
7), we get
and
This implies
for all
with
where
Again from
, we have
and
By applying the same process of left multiplications and using the earlier results obtained in Equation (
2), we conclude that for
and with
for
and
Thus from equation (
11) and (
12), we get
for
.
Now for some
, assume the condition
holds true for
and
. Thus it is sufficient to show that for each
, the equation
holds true. For these consider
. This implies
and
Again by induction hypothesis and using results obtained in (8), (9), (11) and (12), we obtained the following:
- (i)
- (a)
, for ; .
- (b)
-
, for ; .
⋮
- (c)
, for ; .
- (ii)
for , for .
- (iii)
and .
Thus from (i), (ii) and (iii) and left multiplication process helps to obtained that each component of equations (13) and (14) are equals to zero.
Hence
for . Hence mathematical induction gives .
- (2)
By using the calculations as in Lemma 1, It is easy to verified that is a nil module over . Thus, it is nil-Armendariz.
□
Proposition 5. Let R be a commutative ring. If , then the quotient module is rigid.
Proof. Let in . This implies that . Thus, there exists some such that and . Since R is commutative, implies , but . This implies . Therefore, in . Hence, is a rigid module. □
Proposition 6. Let R be a commutative ring and be a torsion-free module. If , then is torsion-free.
Proof. Suppose that . Thus, there exists a non-zero such that . This means . Therefore, there exists some such that and . This implies but . Hence, . Therefore, in . □
Proposition 7. Let R be a commutative ring. If , then is nil-Armendariz.
Proof. Recall from [
10] that if a module
is both rigid and semi-commutative, then it is Armendariz. We observe, as per Proposition 5, that
constitutes a rigid module. Since
R is commutative, this implies that
is semi-commutative. Thus,
is an Armendariz module. Let’s consider
. Clearly,
, where
signifies the corresponding polynomial in
. Consequently,
for all
and
. This suggests that
is a nilpotent element for all
and
. □
Proposition 8. Let N be a submodule of . If N is a subset of , then is nil-Armendariz if and only if is nil-Armendariz over R.
Proof. Let and . We denote . Since N is a nil submodule, then . Hence if and only if . Therefore, we conclude that if and only if . Thus, M is nil-Armendariz if and only if is nil-Armendariz. □
For a module , recall that if R is a commutative domain, then is a submodule and is torsion-free. However, the same is not true if R contains a non-zero zero divisor, as illustrated by . Here, , which is not a submodule. Next, we have identified some conditions for the nil-Armendariz property in the context of the torsion class.
Proposition 9. Let R be a commutative domain. Then is nil-Armendariz if and only if its torsion submodule is nil-Armendariz.
Proof. Let
and
satisfy
. Then we have:
Since
R is a commutative domain, this implies
. We can assume that
. Hence, from the first equation, we get
for some
. Thus,
. Since
is a submodule of
, this implies
. Thus, from the second equation, it is clear that
, which again implies
. Thus, by repeating the same process finitely many times, we conclude that
. Therefore,
M is a nil-Armendariz module. □
Proposition 10. Let R be a commutative domain. If is nil Armendariz module, then is an nil-Armendariz module.
Proof. We denote the quotient
by
. Since
is torsion free, so by Proposition 3.2, it is sufficient to show that that
is Armendariz. Let
and
satisfy
in
. Then, we have
Now from first equation, we have
, which further implies
. Since
is a submodule of
M, hence
. Thus, from second equation, we get
. Thus repeating the same process finitely many times, we conclude that
for
and
. Thus,
is Armendariz module. □
Here we record a “change of rings” result.
Proposition 11. Let be a module and be a ring homomorphism. By defining , M can be made R-module. If ϕ is onto then the following are equivalent.
-
(1)
is nil-Armendariz.
-
(2)
is nil-Armendariz.
Proof. Firstly, we will show that If , then . So, let . Thus, there exists some such that and . Now and . Thus, and vice verse. Thus, the remaining part of the proof easily follows. □
Recall that for a multiplicative closed subset S of the centre C of the ring R, the set has a left module structure over . In the next proposition, we study localization.
Lemma 4. For a module , an element if and only if for some .
Proof. Suppose were and . Thus ∃ such that but . This implies but . Hence . For converse part suppose . Thus, but for some . Hence , but . □
Theorem 3.
For a module, the following conditions are equivalent.
-
(1)
is nil-Armendariz.
-
(2)
is nil-Armendariz -module for each multiplicatively closed subset S of C.
Proof. (1)⇒(2) Let
and
such that
. Here
and
. Thus, we have:
Let us take
and
and consider
,
. Clearly
and
and
. From first equation, we have
such that
but
. Thus,
but
, which implies
and
. otherwise, suppose
, then
which is not possible. Thus,
. Similarly, we can show that
. Proceeding in similar way, again from first equation
, we have
, which implies
. Also, we can see that
. Thus, similarly, we can show that all the coefficients of
in
are in
. Since
is nil-Armendariz this implies
. Thus by above Lemma 4
. (2)⇒(1) Let
, where
and
. Since
and
,
, by Lemma 4,
. □
Theorem 4. Let R be a commutative domain. Then for a module , the following are equivalent:
-
(1)
is nil-Armendariz.
-
(2)
is nil-Armendariz, were Q is the field of fraction of R.
Proof. The proof of this theorem follows similarly to that of Theorem 3. □
3. Results on Nilpotent Class of Modules
In ring theory, the class of nilpotent elements forms an ideal, provided the ring is commutative, semi-commutative, or even nil-Armendariz. However, the same is not true for the class of nilpotent elements in modules. A finite sum of nilpotent elements of a module
is not necessarily nilpotent in
, even when
is defined over a commutative ring
R. For example
and
are nilpotent elements in
since
but
and
but
. However, their sum
is not nilpotent. Additionally, the class of nilpotent elements is not closed under left multiplication by
R, even if
R is commutative. For instance,
, but
. In [
12], SSevviiri and Groenewald posed the question of the conditions under which
forms a submodule. Here, we have found some conditions under which
may form a submodule.
Lemma 5.
Letbe a nil-Armendariz. Then the following are true.
-
(1)
If and , then .
-
(2)
If , then .
-
(3)
If and , then .
Proof.
- (1)
Suppose
and
. Then
Since
nil-Armendariz, implies
.
- (2)
Suppose
Now, since
is nil-Armendariz, from each polynomial, we can select the suitable coefficients to get
.
- (3)
Suppose
, then
Then
multiplying the intermediate polynomials yields
Now, since
is nil-Armendariz, and
, from each polynomial, we can select the suitable coefficients to get
.
□
Proposition 12. Let be nil-Armendariz module. If R is nil ring then is a submodule of .
Proof. Since R is a nil ring, it follows directly from (5) that is submodule of . □
Proposition 13. Let be a nil-Armendariz module over finitely generated commutative ring R. Then, is a submodule of if every proper ideal of R is nil ideal.
Proof. Since every proper ideal is nil, it follows by Theorem 2.1 in [
6],
R that
R is a nil ring. Hence, by Lemma 5,
is a submodule of
. □
For a left R-module M, we generally have as while . Considering the definitions of and , one could suspect to be a subset of . However, the example given below will refute this possibility.
Example 1. Consider the module . Then, by Lemma 1, The matrix module is nil module over . On the other hand, consider . If possible let us suppose that A is torsion element in . Then, by definition there exits non-zero in , satisfying . But however solving implies . Thus, .
Theorem 5. If a module is torsion free, then is a submodule of .
Proof. If the ring R is reduced, then it is obvious that , so is a submodule. On the other hand, if R is non-reduced, then ∃ a non-zero such that implying for every and since is torsion free. Thus, is a submodule. □