1. Introduction
Throughout this paper, all rings are assumed to be commutative with identity. For such a ring
R, we denote by
the set of units, by
the set of regular (i.e., non zero-divisor) elements, by
the set of zero divisors, by
the set of nilpotent elements, and by
the Jacobson radical of
R. If
A is a subset of
R and
I is an ideal of
R, we define the ideal quotient
In particular, the annihilator of A is defined by .
Multiplicatively closed subsets of a commutative ring have long played a fundamental role in commutative algebra, particularly in the localization of rings and modules. Moreover, they play a central role in the structure theory of ideals, offering a flexible framework for defining and analyzing diverse classes of ideals. For instance, the m.c.s. of regular elements of a ring R is used to define r-ideals, where a proper ideal I of R satisfies the condition: if and , then .
We aim in this paper to provide a general framework for defining ideals using arbitrary multiplicatively closed subsets of a ring. Specifically, we introduce the notion of S-ideals. For an arbitrary multiplicatively closed subset S, a proper ideal I of a ring R is called an S-ideal if for all , the condition and implies . Equivalently, I is an S-ideal if and only if .
In this work, we explore the theory of S-ideals in depth, examining their foundational properties, characterizations, relationships to other types of ideals, and their behavior under various ring constructions and extensions. Beyond r-ideals, which are defined with respect to the multiplicatively closed set , we show in this paper that several well-known classes of ideals naturally arise as S-ideals for suitable choices of multiplicatively closed subsets . For instance, every P-primary ideal of R is an S-ideal when . More generally, any ideal that admits a primary decomposition can be viewed as an S-ideal where S is the complement of the finite union of the associated prime ideals.
Moreover, -ideals, which are central in the theory of rings with zero-divisors, fit naturally within the S-ideal framework as well. Recall that an ideal is a -ideal if, for each element , the intersection of all minimal prime ideals containing a is also contained in I. We show that these ideals can be considered as S-ideals with respect to the multiplicatively closed subset . These examples demonstrate how varying the choice of multiplicatively closed subsets enables a unified and generalized approach to studying ideal structures across various classes.
In addition to connecting familiar ideal classes to suitable multiplicatively closed subsets, we explore how certain specific forms of S lead to meaningful characterizations of S-ideals. For example, when for an ideal J of R, or when S is the set of powers of a fixed non-unit element, we provide explicit descriptions of the resulting S-ideals. Similarly, when S consists of primitive polynomials in a polynomial ring over R, or other carefully structured multiplicatively closed subsets, we are able to determine necessary and sufficient conditions for an ideal of R to be an S-ideal. These cases illustrate the flexibility of the S-ideal framework and highlight its potential for unifying diverse ideal-theoretic behaviors under a common generalization.
Section 2 of the paper is devoted to presenting several fundamental properties and characterizations of S-ideals. In addition to foundational results highlighted earlier, Proposition 1 provides a concise summary of key properties and includes a wide range of illustrative examples. One of the notable results we establish is that every maximal S-ideal of a ring R is prime (Proposition 4). Furthermore, we generalize the classical Prime Avoidance Lemma to the broader setting of multiplicatively closed subsets, offering a new version tailored to S-ideals (Corollary 1). When , we explore connections between S-ideals and von Neumann regularity in the ring of fractions . In particular, we provide two distinct characterizations of this regularity: one in terms of semiprime S-ideals and the other via minimal prime S-ideals (Theorems 2 and 3). We also identify rings where is the only S-ideal and provide a precise characterization in Proposition 6. For an arbitrary multiplicatively closed set S, Theorem 5 describes the structure of nonzero S-ideals within GCD-domains.
In the final section, we examine the behavior of S-ideals under various ring-theoretic constructions and extensions. These include localizations (Theorem 9), homomorphic images or quotient rings (Proposition 9), and direct products of rings (Proposition 10). We also study S-ideals in more advanced constructions such as idealization rings (Proposition 13) and the amalgamation of rings along an ideal, with key results captured in Theorems 10 and 11.
2. S-Ideals and Their Foundational Properties
In this section, we develop the foundational theory of S-ideals in commutative rings. We provide key definitions, explore characterizations, and relate S-ideals to known classes such as prime, semiprime and r-ideals. Several properties are examined with respect to different types of multiplicatively closed subsets. We also characterize when the localization is von Neumann regular in terms of S-ideals. These results unify and extend existing notions like r-ideals under a broader framework.
Definition 1. Let I be a proper ideal of a ring R, and let S be a multiplicatively closed subset of R. We say that I is an S-ideal if for all , the conditions and imply that .
If I is an S-ideal of a ring R, then . Indeed if there is , then and imply , a contradiction. However, the converse is not true in general. For example, choose and . Then but I is not an S-ideal of since and but . It is clear that if are multiplicatively closed subsets of a ring R, then any T-ideal of R is an S-ideal.
We begin with the following elementary result, whose proof is straightforward and is left to the reader.
Proposition 1. Let S be a multiplicatively closed subset of a ring R.
The class of -ideals is the same as the class of r-ideals.
Every proper ideal in a ring R is an S-ideal if and only if .
The ideal of R is an S-ideal if and only if .
If I is an S-ideal of R, then so is .
The intersection of any family of S-ideals is an S-ideal.
If I is an S-ideal and , then is an S-ideal. In particular, if , then is always an S-ideal.
If , then every von Neumann regular ideal is an S-ideal.
If I is a proper ideal of R, then I is an S-ideal if and only if for ideals K and J of R, and imply .
If K is an ideal of R with and I, J are S-ideals such that , then .
If I and J are ideals of R such that and is an S-ideal, then .
A prime (resp. primary) ideal P of R is an S-ideal if and only if .
By using Zorn’s Lemma, one can prove that if I is an ideal of a ring R such that , then there exists a prime ideal P of R such that and . Thus, every ideal disjoint from S is contained in a prime S-ideal.
Remark 1. Any ideal I of a ring R is an S-ideal with respect to some multiplicatively closed subset of R. Indeed, the set is the largest multiplicatively closed set for which I is an S-ideal.
Let
R be a commutative ring and
S a multiplicatively closed subset of
R. For any ideal
I of
R, the
S-compoment of
I is defined as:
It is clear that
is an ideal of
R containing
I and it is well-known that
,
8]
Proposition 2. Let S be a multiplicatively closed subset of a ring R and I be an ideal of R disjoint with S. Then is the smallest S-ideal of R containing I.
Proof. Let such that and . Then there is such that . Hence, and is an S-ideal of R. Now, let J be an S-ideal such that . Take so that there is such that . Since J is an S-ideal and , then . Hence , and is the smallest S-ideal containing I. □
Let
I be an idealof a ring
R and
S be a multiplicatively closed subset of
R. Following [
11], the
S-radical of
I is defined by
Which is an ideal of
R containing
. We can easily conclude that
and so
is an
S-ideal of
R.
For a multiplicatively closed subset S of a ring R, the following theorem provides a useful characterization of S-ideals in R.
Theorem 1. Let R be a ring, I a proper ideal of R, and S a multiplicatively closed subset of R. The following are equivalent:
Proof. Assume I is an S-ideal and let . If . Then and so as I is an S-ideal. Thus, and so as the reverse containment is obvious.
Assume that for every , and let so that there exists such that . Then . Therefore, and since clearly , we get .
Suppose and let such that and . Then and I is an S-ideal of R. □
Recall that for an ideal I of a ring R, denotes the set of minimal prime ideals of R that contain I. The following proposition shows that minimal prime ideals over an S-ideal are themselves S-ideals.
Proposition 3. Let S be a multiplicatively closed subset of a ring R and , where I is an S-ideal of R. Then P is an S-ideal.
Proof. Let
such that
and
. by [
7] [Theorem 2.1], there exist
and
such that
. Since
and
I is an
S-ideal, we infer that
. It follows that
as
. Thus
and
P is is an
S-ideal of
R. □
By Proposition 1 (3), we conclude that whenever , then any minimal prime ideal of R is an S-ideal.
It is important to note that the conclusion of the preceding proposition may fail if the prime ideal P is not a minimal prime over I, as demonstrated in the following example.
Example 1. Consider the non-prime ideal in . Then the prime ideal is not minimal over I. Consider the multiplicatively closed subset of . Then P is not an S-ideal since clearly, . We prove that I is an S-ideal. Let and such that . Then , and imply . Therefore, and I is an S-ideal of .
Next, we prove that maximal S-ideals of a ring R are prime.
Proposition 4. Let S be a multiplicatively closed subset of a ring R. Then any maximal S-ideal of R is prime.
Proof. Suppose I is a maximal S-ideal of R. Let such that and . Then the ideal is proper in R and is an S-ideal by Proposition 1 (6). Since and I is a maximal S-ideal, then and I is a prime ideal of R. □
Let , where B and each are subsets of a ring R. Recall that this inclusion is said to be irreducible if no can be removed from the union; that is, for every , we have .
In the following, we generalize [
13] [Theorem 3.8] concerning irreducible coverings of ideals by replacing the set of regular elements with an arbitrary multiplicatively closed set.
Proposition 5. Let be an irreducible inclusion of ideals in a ring R and let be a multiplicatively closed set. Suppose that is an S-ideal and that for all . Then .
Proof. Since the inclusion is irreducible, we have , so there exists an element . In particular, . Now take any ; then , but because otherwise we would have , contradicting the choice of a. Therefore, , and since , it follows that . Hence, , and so . Now, since each , we conclude that . Since is an S-ideal, then by Proposition 1 (8), we conclude that , as required. □
The following corollary is an interesting variant of the Prime Avoidance Lemma, generalized to an arbitrary multiplicatively closed set.
Corollary 1. Let , where Q and each are ideals of a ring R, and assume the inclusion is irreducible. Let S be a multiplicatively closed subset of R. Suppose that is an S-ideal and that for all . Then .
In particular, if in the above irreducible inclusion, and , then and .
In the following theorem, we provide a characterization of the von Neumann regularity of the localization
for an arbitrary multiplicatively closed subset
. This result extends the corresponding characterization for the case
, which appears in [
13] [Proposition 3.6] in the literature concerning
r-ideals.
Theorem 2. Let R be a commutative ring and a multiplicatively closed subset. Then is a von Neumann regular ring if and only if every proper S-ideal of R is semiprime.
Proof. ⇒) Suppose is a von Neumann regular ring. Let I be a proper S-ideal of R, and let such that . Then and since is von Neumann regular, there exists such that . Thus, , which implies there exists such that . Since I is an S-ideal and , it follows that . Hence I is semiprime.
⇐) Conversely, suppose every proper S-ideal of R is semiprime. Let . Let and consider the ideal . If , then for some . Thus, is a unit in and so is a von Neumann regular element in . Suppose . Then is an S-ideal of R with . By assumption, is semiprime in R and so . Hence, there exists such that , i.e., for some . Then in , and so again is a von Neumann regular element in . Hence is a von Neumann regular ring. □
It is well known that in a von Neumann regular ring, for any prime ideal
P containing an element
x, the annihilator of
x is contained in
P. We recall the result established in [
13] [Proposition 3.5], where the author characterizes the von Neumann regularity of the total ring of quotients
in terms of
r-ideals. In the following theorem, we extend this result to a more general setting by replacing
with an arbitrary multiplicatively closed subset
.
Theorem 3. Let R be a reduced ring, and let be a multiplicatively closed subset. Then the is a von Neumann regular ring if and only if every prime S-ideal P of R is a minimal prime ideal of R.
Proof.
Suppose that is a von Neumann regular ring. Let P be a prime S-ideal of R. Then and so is a prime ideal of . Assume, for contradiction, that . Then there exists an element such that . So there exists with . Therefore, , but in , i.e., . Hence, the annihilator of is not contained in , which contradicts the assumption that is von Neumann regular. Thus, .
Conversely, assume that every prime S-ideal P of R is a minimal prime ideal. Let M be a maximal ideal of . Then for some prime ideal P of R disjoint from S. This prime ideal P is an S-ideal and so by assumption, . Hence, . Therefore, every maximal ideal of is minimal, and so is von Neumann regular. □
Let
S be a multiplicatively closed subset of a ring
R. The saturation of
S is the set
is a unit in
. It is clear that
is a multiplicatively closed subset of
R and that
. Moreover, it is well known that
for some
}, see [
8]. The set
S is called saturated if
.
In the following proposition, we characterize rings in which is the only S-ideal where S is saturated.
Proposition 6. Let S be a saturated multiplicatively closed subset of a ring R. Then the following are equivalent:
Proof.
Suppose is the only ideal of R. It is well known that there is a prime ideal P of R with . Thus, P is an S-ideal of R by Proposition 1 (11). By assumption, is a prime ideal and so R is a domain. Now, Suppose there exists . Since S is saturated, then and so by Proposition 2, is an S-ideal of R. Therefore, which is a contradiction as . Therefore, .
We prove this implication without the assumption that S is saturated. Suppose R is a domain and . Then and so is an S-ideal by Proposition 1 (3). If I is any non-zero ideal of R, then and so I is not an S-ideal of R. Thus, is the only S-ideal of R. □
If S is not saturated in Proposition 1, then we may find a ring R such that is the only S-ideal of R but . For example, consider the multiplicatively closed subset of any domain D. If I is an S-ideal of D, then and so . Therefore, and is the only S-ideal of R. Note that S is not saturated as but .
Note also that if R is a non domain and , then R has no S-ideals. Indeed, is not an S-ideal by Proposition 1 (3) and any nonzero ideal I of R is also not an S-ideal since .
Next, we characterize non-zero principal S-ideals of any GCD-domain.
Theorem 4. Let R be a GCD-domain, S a multiplicatively closed subset of R and be a proper non-zero ideal of R. Then I is an S-ideal of R if and only if for all .
Proof.
Suppose is a non-zero S-ideal of R. Assume, for contradiction, that there is a non unit element such that for some . Then there exists an irreducible element p of R such that and . Write for some . Then and . But, (since and p is not a unit), contradicting the assumption that I is an S-ideal of R. Therefore, for all .
Suppose for all and let such that and . Then for some and . Since R is a GCD-domain, then and so . Thus, I is an S-ideal of R. □
Moreover, we consider in the following theorem the non-principal case of Theorem 4. We start by the following lemma.
Lemma 1. Let R be a GCD-domain, S a multiplicatively closed subset of R and I be a non-zero proper ideal of R. Then for every , there exists an element such that .
Proof. Assume, for contradiction, that there exists such that every element satisfies , say, is a nonunit for all . Let equipped with the divisibility partially ordered: if and only if . Then A is non-empty and every chain in A has a lower bound . By Zorn’s Lemma, A has a minimal element for some . Let . Then . Since , we have . If , then and since d is minimal in A, then must be a unit and . Now, and imply since I is an S-ideal of R. This contradicts the assumption that for every . Therefore, for every , there is such that as needed. □
Theorem 5. Let R be a ring, S a multiplicatively closed subset of R and I a proper ideal of R. If for all , then I is an S-ideal of R. The converse is true if I is non-zero and R is a GCD-domain.
Proof. Let such that and . Since by assumption, , there exist and such that . Multiplying both sides by b, we get . Therefore, I is an S-ideal of R as required. Now, assume R is a GCD-domain and I is a non-zero S-ideal of R. If , then by Lemma 1, there exists an element such that . Thus, there exist such that . Therefore, for every as needed. □
Corollary 2. Let R be a ring, a non-unit, and I a proper ideal of R. If , then I is an S-ideal of R. The converse is true if I is non-zero and R is a GCD-domain.
Corollary 3. Let where . Then a proper ideal of is an S-ideal if and only if .
If we consider the case where m is a prime integer in Corollary 3, then we achieve an example of a ring in which every ideal disjoint with S is an S-ideal.
Corollary 4. Let where p is a prime integer and let be a proper ideal of . The following are equivalent:
I is an S-ideal.
.
.
Proof. The proof is straightforward and is left to the reader. □
The converse of Theorem 5 does not hold in general, as demonstrated by the following example.
Example 2.
Let k be a field and consider the ring . Define the multiplicatively closed subset where is a non-zero non-unit element. Let be the ideal of R generated by y. First, we verify that I is an S-ideal. Let and such that . Since for some , we have
Since and y are coprime in the UFD R, then the factor y must divide b and so . Therefore, I is an S-ideal of R. On the other hand, . Note that R is not a GCD-domain since there is no greatest common divisor of x and y in R.
Problem 1. Can the converse of Theorem 1 be extended to a broader class of commutative rings? Specifically, can one identify ring-theoretic conditions weaker than being a GCD-domain under which the converse implication also holds?
Proposition 7. Let R be a ring, P a prime ideal of R, and let . Then an ideal I of R is an S-ideal if and only if I is P-primary.
Proof. Suppose I is an S-ideal and such that and . Then and by the S-ideal property, it follows that . Therefore, I is P-primary. Conversely, suppose I is P-primary. Let such that and . Then and hence as I is P-primary. □
The following theorem is a generalization of the preceding proposition, where the multiplicatively closed set S is defined by excluding the union of finitely many prime ideals rather than a single prime ideal.
Theorem 6.
Let R be a commutative ring with identity, and let be prime ideals of R. Define the multiplicatively closed set . Then any S-ideal I of R has a primary decomposition where
Proof. Assume
I is an
S-ideal, where
and let
such that
. Then
is an
-ideal for each
i by Proposition 2. Therefore,
is a
-primary ideal of
R by Proposition 7. If
, then
with
. Thus,
for all
i and so
. Conversely, Let
. Then for each
i, there exists
such that
. Let
be the ideal generated by all of the
. We show that
. Suppose, to the contrary, that
. Then by Prime Avoidance Lemma,
for some
. But
and
, a contradiction. Hence, there exists
. Since
, we can write
so that
Since
, it follows that
. Therefore,
and the equality
holds. □
In the following theorem we describe the S-ideals of a ring R with respect to the multiplicatively closed subset for some proper ideal J of R.
Theorem 7. Let R be a ring, J a proper ideal of R and set . Let I be an ideal of R. If , then I is an S-ideal of R. Moreover, The converse holds if and I is maximal among proper S-ideals of R.
Proof. Suppose . Take any and such that . Then , and since (as ), it follows that . Thus, I is an S-ideal of R. Conversely, suppose and I is maximal among proper S-ideals of R. Then , and thus every proper ideal of R is an S-ideal. Suppose there is . Then the ideal is strictly larger than I and still a proper ideal. Indeed, Suppose for contradiction . Then for some and and so , a contradiction. Thus, is an S-ideal which contradicts the maximality of I. Therefore, every lies in I and . □
However, the converse of Theorem 7 need not be true in general as we can see in the following example:
Example 3. Let and let , so that . Then is a -primary ideal of and so it is an S-ideal by Proposition 7. However, .
Recall that an ideal
I of a ring
R is called a
-ideal if for every
, the intersection
of all minimal prime ideals containing
a is contained in
I, i.e.,
. In [
13] [Theorem 2.19], it is proved that every
-ideal of a ring
R is an
r-ideal. More generally, we next determine a multiplicatively closed subset
S such that every
-ideal is an
S-ideal.
Proposition 8.
Let R be a commutative ring and define the multiplicatively closed subset
Then every -ideal of R is an S-ideal.
Proof. Suppose I is a -ideal and let with . Since , by the definition of -ideals, we have . Also, since , it follows that for any , hence . Therefore, clearly , and so I is an S-ideal. □
As the following example indicates, the converse of Proposition 8 does not necessarily hold.
Example 4.
Let , and let be the zero ideal of R. We know that the unique minimal prime ideal of R is . Then
Since clearly , then is an S-ideal by Proposition 1 (3). However, if we take , then is not contained in I. Therefore, I is not a -ideal of R.
In [
13] [Definition 3.11], the concept of
r-multiplicatively closed sets (briefly,
r-m.c.s) was introduced using the original m.c.s
. To allow broader applications, we now introduce
S-multiplicatively closed sets (briefly,
S-m.c.s), where
S is any multiplicatively closed set of
R.
Definition 2. Let S be a subset of a ring R. We say that a subset T of R is an S-multiplicatively closed subset (briefly, S-m.c.s) if T contains at least one element from S and for all and , we have . We say that T is S-saturated if it is an S-m.c.s and for all , implies and .
Remark 2. Similar to the case of r-m.c.s T where we may assume for practical purposes that ,13], we may similarly assume that any S-m.c.s T of R contains S. This is because the set is again an S-m.c.s larger than T containing S and clearly for any ideal I of R, if and only if .
Lemma 2. Let be a family of S-ideals of R. Then the set is an S-saturated m.c.s.
Proof. Since each is an S-ideal, . Hence, . Now, suppose and . Then for all i, and since is an S-ideal, then . Thus, , proving that T is an S-mcs. To show thatT is S-saturated, assume . Then for all and so for all . Thus, . □
We now present an analogue of [
13] [Proposition 3.14] by replacing
with an arbitrary
S.
Theorem 8. Let S be a subset of a ring R. Then a subset T of R is an S-saturated m.c.s of R such that if and only if for some family of S-ideals of R.
Proof. ⇒) Assume
T is an
S-saturated m.c.s. of
R and
. Let
By the definition of
, we have clearly,
. To prove the reverse inclusion, let
and suppose that
. If
, say
for some
, then
T being
S-saturated implies
, a contradiction. Therefore,
and so
as
. By Proposition 2, the ideal
is an
S-ideal and
. Thus,
, a contradiction. Therefore,
and the equality
holds.
⇐) Lemma 2. □
3. S-Ideals in Ring Extensions and Constructions
In this section, we investigate the behavior of S-ideals under various ring-theoretic constructions and extensions. We examine how the concept of S-ideals is preserved or transformed when passing to localized rings (rings of fractions), quotient rings, and finite Cartesian products. In addition, we study the extension of S-ideals to more structured rings, including polynomial rings, idealization rings, and amalgamated algebras. This analysis provides insight into the structural robustness of S-ideals and illustrates their applicability across a wide range of ring-theoretic settings.
If
S and
T are multiplicatively closed subsets of a ring
R, then
is multiplicatively closed subsets of
. In particular,
is multiplicatively closed in
.
Theorem 9. Let I a proper ideal of a ring R and let be multiplicatively closed subsets of R. If I is an S-ideal of R and , then is an -ideal of .
Proof. Suppose there is . Then there exists such that and I being an S-ideal implies , a contradiction. Thus, . Let and , and suppose Then there exists such that . Since I is an S-ideal and , then and so . Hence, is an -ideal of . □
In particular, if , then all elements of are units in . Thus, Proposition 1 (2) implies the following corollary:
Corollary 5. Let S be a multiplicatively closed subset of a ring R. Then any proper ideal of is an -ideal.
However, the converse of Theorem 9 is not true in general.
Example 5. Let , , and . Then , and . We show that is a -ideal in : Let and suppose there exists such that , that is, for some Since , write for some , . Then and so . Therefore, is a -ideal in . On the other hand, by Corollary 3, is not an S-ideal in since .
Proposition 9. Let be a ring homomorphism and S be a multiplicatively closed subset of . Then the following statements hold.
If J is an -ideal of , then is an S-ideal of .
If f is an epimorphism and I is an S-ideal of containing , then is an -ideal of
Proof. (1) Let with and Then with and since J is an -ideal of , . Thus, .
(2) Let such that and . Write for some and since f is onto, there is such that . Since and , we have and so as I is an S-ideal of . Therefore, and is an -ideal of . □
Let S be a multiplicatively closed subset of a ring R and I be an ideal of R disjoint with S. If we denote by , then is a multiplicatively closed subset of . In view of Proposition 9, we conclude the following result for -ideals of .
Corollary 6. Let S be a multiplicatively closed subset of a ring R and I, J are two ideals of R with . Then J is an S-ideal of R if and only if is an -ideal of .
Proof. We apply the canonical epimorphism in Proposition 9. □
Corollary 7. Let n be a positive integer and let be a multiplicatively closed subset of the ring . Then a proper ideal of is an -ideal if and only for every .
Proof. Consider the canonical epimorphism in Proposition 4 and use Theorem 5. □
Let be a family of rings and for each , let be a multiplicatively closed subset of . The following proposition investigates -ideals in the Cartesian product ring .
Proposition 10.
Let be any family of rings and for each , let be a multiplicatively closed subset and be an ideal. Define:
Then I is an S-ideal of R if and only if is an -ideal of for each .
Proof.
Assume
is an
S-ideal in
. Fix
and suppose
,
with
. Define elements in
R as follows:
Then
because
and
for
. Since
I is an
S-ideal of
R, it follows that
, hence
. Therefore,
is an
-ideal of
for all
.
Assume each is an -ideal in . Let , such that . Then for all . Since each is an -ideal and , it follows that for all . Thus, and hence, I is an S-ideal in R. □
Let R be a commutative ring with identity and a multiplicatively closed subset. If I is an S-ideal of R, then it is easy to verify that , the ideal generated by I in , is also an S-ideal in . That is, the S-ideal property is preserved under extension to the polynomial ring.
However, in general, the set , consisting of polynomials with coefficients in S, is not a multiplicatively closed subset of . For example, if in , then and are in but .
To address this issue, we consider instead the set of monomials of the form
with
and
. Define:
It is straightforward to check that
is a multiplicatively closed subset of
.
In the following proposition, we characterize the -ideals of in terms of S-ideals of R.
Proposition 11.
Let R be a commutative ring with identity, S a multiplicatively closed subset of R, and let
Then for any ideal I of R, we have:
Proof.
Suppose I is an S-ideal in R. Let and with , such that . Write . Then: . So for all j, . Since I is an S-ideal and , we get for all j, so . Hence, is an -ideal.
Suppose is an -ideal. Let and with . Then . Since and , the assumption implies , i.e., . Thus, I is an S-ideal. □
We now study S-ideals of with respect to other types of multiplicatively closed subsets, beyond those inherited directly from R. This broader approach allows us to explore more refined structures within the polynomial ring.
For a polynomial
, the content of
f, denoted
, is the ideal of
R generated by its coefficients. A polynomial
is said to be primitive if its content
. It is proved in [
12] [Proposition 33.1] that
is a complement of a union of prime ideals of
and so it is a (regular) multiplicatively closed subset of
. The ring of fractions of
at
T is denoted by
, and it is called the
Nagata ring of
R. By [
12] [Proposition 33.1], for any ideal
I of
R,
and so
is an
T-ideal of
.
In particular, if we consider the multiplicatively subset
is monic
, then also
is an
N-ideal of
for every ideal
I of
R. The ring of fractions of
at
N is denoted by
and it is well-known in the literature, see [
12].
While is an S-ideal of for every ideal when or as defined above, this property does not necessarily hold for arbitrary multiplicatively closed subsets that contain T or N.
Proposition 12.
Let S be a multiplicatively closed subset of a ring R. Define
Then J is an S-ideal of R if and only if is an T-ideal of .
Proof.
Suppose
J is an
S-ideal of
R, and let
such that
and
. Since
, there exists
such that
. Write
and
Then
, with
Since
, we have
for all
k. In particular, for each
j,
for all
i. Let
, so there exist
such that
. Then for each
j, we compute
since each
. Thus,
for all
j, and since
and
J is an
S-ideal, it follows that
. Hence, all coefficients of
f lie in
J and
. Therefore,
is a
T-ideal.
Suppose is a T-ideal and let with and . Define , , so and . Then by assumption, and so . Therefore, J is an S-ideal of R. □
The following corollaries are special cases of the preceding proposition.
Corollary 8.
Let P be a prime ideal of a ring R, and define
Then I is an S-ideal of R with if and only if is an T-ideal of .
Corollary 9. Let I be an ideal of ring R. Then I is an -ideal of R if and only if is an -ideal of .
Corollary 10.
Let be a multiplicatively closed subset of a commutative ring R, and define
Then I is an S-ideal of R with if and only if is an T-ideal of .
Recall that the idealization of an R-module M denoted by is the commutative ring with coordinate-wise addition and multiplication defined as . For an ideal I of R and a submodule N of M, is an ideal of if and only if . If S is a multiplicatively closed subset of R, then clearly the set is a multiplicatively closed subsets of the ring for any submodule K of M.
Definition 3. Let R be a ring and let N be a proper submodule of an R-module M. Let S be a multiplicatively closed subset of R. Then N is called an S-submodule of M if whenever and , implies .
Equivalently, N is an S-submodule of M if and only if .
Next, for a submodule K of an R-module M, we determine the relation between S-ideals of R and -ideals of .
Proposition 13. Let be submodules of an R-module M, S be a multiplicatively closed subset of R and I be an ideal of R where . Then is an -ideal of if and only if I is an S-ideal of R and N is an S-submodule of M.
Proof.
Suppose is an -ideal of . Let such that and . Then with and by assumption, . Thus, and I is an S-ideal of R. Now, let and such that . Then with . Again by assumption, and so . Thus, N is an S-submodule of M.
Suppose I is an S-ideal of R and N is an S-submodule of M. Let such that and . Then and and I being an S-ideal implies . Since and , then . Since N is an S-submodule of M and , then . Therefore, and is an -ideal of . □
The converse of the proposition 13 is not true in general. That is, even if I is an S-ideal of R, the ideal of need not be an -ideal if N is not an S-submodule of M. We demonstrate this with the following example:
Example 6. Consider the ring and the R-module and let . Define the ideal of , and the submodule of . Then and I is an S-ideal of . However, N is not an S-submodule of M since if we take and , then , but . Consequently, although I is an S-ideal, the ideal fails to be an -ideal of since and but . This confirms that the converse of the theorem is not valid when N is not an S-submodule.
Let
R and
be two rings,
J be an ideal of
and
be a ring homomorphism. The set
is a subring of
called the amalgamation of
R and
along
J with respect to
f. In particular, if
is the identity homomorphism on
R, then
is the amalgamated duplication of a ring along an ideal
J. Many properties of this ring have been investigated and analyzed over the last two decades, see for example [
5,
6].
Let
I be an ideal of
R and
K be an ideal of
. Then
and
,
,
are ideals of
,
6]. For a multiplicatively closed subset
S of
R, one can easily verify that
and
are multiplicatively closed subsets of
. Let
T be a multiplicatively closed subset of
. Then clearly, the set
is also a multiplicatively closed subset of
.
Next, for a multiplicatively closed subset S of a ring R, we determine when the ideal is an -ideal in .
Theorem 10. Consider the amalgamation of rings R and along the ideals J of with respect to a homomorphism f. Let S be a multiplicatively closed subset of R and I be an ideal of R. The following statements are equivalent.
Proof. Note that clearly, I is proper in R of and only if is proper in .
Clear as .
Suppose is an -ideal of . Let such that and . Then with . By assumption, and so . Therefore, I is an S-ideal of R.
Suppose I is an S-ideal of R. Let for where . Then and and as I is an S-ideal, then . Thus, and is an -ideal of . □
Corollary 11. Consider the amalgamation of rings R and along the ideal J of with respect to a homomorphism f. Let S be a multiplicatively closed subset of R. The -ideals of containing are of the form where I is an S-ideal of
Proof. From Theorem 10, is an -ideal of for any S-ideal I of R. Let K be an -ideal of containing Consider the surjective homomorphism defined by for all . Then and so is an S-ideal of R by Proposition 9. Since , we conclude that as needed. □
In the following theorem, we clarify the relation between T-ideals of and -ideal of .
Theorem 11. Consider the amalgamation of rings R and along the ideals J of with respect to an epimorphism f. Let K be an ideal of and T be a multiplicatively closed subset of . Then is an -ideal of if and only if K is an T-ideal of .
Proof. Note that clearly, K is proper in if and only if is proper in .
Suppose is an -ideal of . Let , such that and . Choose such that and . Then with and . By assumption, we have and so . Therefore, K is an T-ideal of . conversely, suppose K is an T-ideal of . Let for where . Then with and so as K is an T-ideal of . It follows that and is an -ideal of . □
Corollary 12. Let R,I, J, K, S and T be as in Theorems 10 and 11. Then