1. Introduction
Breakable semigroups, introduced by Rédei [
1] in 1967, have the property that every nonempty subset of them is a subsemigroup. It was proved that they are semigroups with empty Frattini-substructure [
1]. For a structure 
S (i.e., a group, a semigroup, a module, a ring or a field), the set of those elements which may be omitted from each generating system (containing them) of 
S is a substructure of the same kind of 
S, called the Frattini-substructure of 
S. However, as mentioned in the book [
1], there are some exceptions. The first one is when the Frattini-substructure is the empty set and this is the case of breakable semigroups, unit groups, zero modules or zero rings. The second one concerns the skew fields having the Frattini-substructure zero [
1]. Based on the definition, it is easy to see that a semigroup 
S is breakable if and only if 
 for any 
, i.e., the product of any two elements of the given semigroup is always one of the considered elements. Another characterization of these semigroups is given by Tamura and Shafer [
2], using the associated power semigroup, i.e., a semigroup 
S is breakable if and only if its power semigroup 
 is idempotent. An idempotent semigroup is a semigroup 
S that satisfies the identity 
 for any 
. A complete description of breakable semigroups was given by Rédei [
1], writing them as a special decomposition of left-zero and right-zero semigroups (see Theorem 1).
The power set, i.e., the family of all subsets of the initial set, has many roles in algebra, one of them being in hyperstructures theory, where the power set 
 is the codomain of any hyperoperation on a nonempty set 
S, i.e., a mapping 
. If the support set 
S is endowed with a binary associative operation, i.e., 
 is a semigroup, then this operation can be extended also to the set of nonempty subsets of 
S, denoted by 
, in the most natural way: 
. Thereby, 
 becomes a semigroup, called the power semigroup of 
S. Similarly, if 
 is a semihypergroup, then we can define on the power set a binary operation
      
      which is again associative (see Theorem 5). Going more in deep now, if we have a group 
 and we extend the operation to the set 
 as before, then a new operation is defined on 
: 
. A nonempty subset 
 of 
 is called an 
-group [
3] on 
G, if 
 is a group. Similarly, on the group 
, one may define a hyperoperation by 
, where 
, called by Corsini [
4] the Chinese hyperoperation. An overview on the links between 
-groups and hypergroups has recently proposed by Cristea et al. [
5].
Having in mind these connections between semigroups and semihypergroups and the importance of the power set and the decomposition of a set in the classical algebra, in this paper we would like to direct the reader’s attention to a new concept, that one of breakable semihypergroup. The rest of the paper is structured as follows. In 
Section 2 we recall the breakable semigroups and the fundamental semigroups associated with semihypergroups. The main part of the paper is covered by 
Section 3, where we define the breakable semihypergroups and we present their characterizations using the power set and a generalization of Rédei’s theorem for semi-symmetric semihypergroups, that permits to decompose them in a certain way. This decomposition is similar with that one proposed by Rédei’s for semigroups, but slightly modified, to cover all the types of algebraic semihypergroups, by consequence all the types of algebraic semigroups. We have noticed that for some semigroups the Rédei’s theorem does not work, while our proposed decomposition solves the problem. Besides we show that the set of all hyperideals of a breakable semi-symmetric semihypergroup is a chain. The semi-symmetry property plays here a fundamental role. This property holds for the classical structures, while in the hyperstructures has a significant meaning: the cardinalities of the hyperproducts of two elements 
 and 
 are the same for each pair of elements 
 in the considered hyperstructure 
. Clearly this is evident for commutative hyperstructures. At the end of the paper, some conclusive ideas and new lines of research are included.
  2. Preliminaries
Since we like to have the keywords of this note clearly specified and laid out, in this section we recall some definitions and properties of semigroups and semihypergroups. For more details on both arguments the reader is refereed to [
1,
2,
6] for the classical algebraic structures and [
7,
8,
9,
10] for the algebraic hyperstructures.
A semigroup  is called a left zero semigroup, by short an l-semigroup, if each element of it is a left zero element, i.e., for any , we have  for all . Similarly, a right zero semigroup, or an r-semigroup, is a semigroup in which each element is a zero right element, i.e., for any , we have  for all .
In 1967, Rédei [
1] gave the definition of 
breakable semigroups, as a subclass of the semigroups having an empty Frattini-substructure.
Definition 1. A semigroup S is breakable if every non-empty subset of S is a subsemigroup.
 It is easy to see that a semigroup  is breakable if and only if  for any .
A complete description of the structure of a breakable semigroup is given by Theorem 50 in [
1].
Theorem 1. A semigroup S is breakable if and only if, it can be partitioned into classes and the set of classes can be ordered in such a way that every class constitutes an l-semigroup or an r-semigroup, and for any two elements  and  of two different classes , with , we have .
 Moreover, if 
 is a semigroup, then it is obvious that the set 
 of all non-empty subsets of 
S can be endowed with a semigroup structure, too, called the 
power semigroup, where the binary operation is defined as follows: for 
, 
. Then a breakable semigroup can be characterized also using properties of its power semigroup, as shown by Tamura and Shafer [
2].
Theorem 2. A semigroup S is breakable if and only if its power semigroup is idempotent, i.e.,  for all .
 On the other hand, the set  is the codomain of any hyperoperation defined on the support set S, i.e., a mapping . Now, if we start with a semihypergroup , till now only a classical operation was defined on S, and not a hyperoperation, so the power set is again a semigroup, as we will show later on in Theorem 5.
The other natural and crucial connection between hyperstructures and classical structures is represented by the 
strongly regular relations. More exactly, on any semihypergroup 
 one can define the relation 
 and its transitive closure 
, and define a suitable operation on the quotient 
 in order to endow it with a semigroup structure, called the 
fundamental semigroup related to 
S. Here below we recall the construction, introduced by Koskas [
11] and studied mainly by Freni [
12], who proved that 
 on hypergroups. For all natural numbers 
, define the relation 
 on a semihypergroup 
, as follows: 
 if and only if there exist 
 such that 
. Take 
, where 
 is the diagonal relation on 
S. Denote by 
 the transitive closure of 
. The relation 
 is a strongly regular relation. On the quotient 
 define a binary operation as follows: 
 for all 
. Moreover, the relation 
 is the smallest equivalence relation on a semihypergroup 
S, such that the quotient 
 is a semigroup. The quotient 
 is called the 
fundamental semigroup.
  3. Breakable Semihypergroups
In this section, based on the notion of breakable semigroup introduced by Rédei [
1], we define and characterize breakable semihypergroups. We present a generalization of Rédei’s theorem for semi-symmetric semihypergroups.
In a classical structure (semigroup, monoid, group, ring, etc.) the composition of two elements is always another element of the support set. This property is not conserved in a hyperstructure, but it is extended in such a way that the result of the composition of two elements—called hypercomposition—is a subset of the support set. This means that, for two elements , the cardinalities of the compositions  and  in a classical algebraic structure are always equal (being both 1), while in a hyperstructure they could be greater than 1 and also different one from another. For this reason we introduce the next concept.
Definition 2. A semihypergroup  is called semi-symmetric if  for every .
 It is clear that any commutative semihypergroup is also semi-symmetric.
Definition 3. A semihypergroup S is called breakable if every non-empty subset of S is a subsemihypergroup.
 Obviously, every breakable semigroup can be considered as a breakable semihypergroup, by consequence l-semigroups and r-semigroups are examples of breakable semihypergroups.
A hyperoperation “
” on a nonempty set 
S, satisfying the property 
 for all elements 
, is called 
extensive (by J. Chvalina and his group of researchers [
13,
14,
15]) or 
closed (by Ch. Massouros [
16]). The most simple hyperoperation of this type was defined by the first time by Konguetsof [
17] around 70’s as 
 for all 
. More than 20 years later, this hyperoperation was re-considered by G.G. Massouros et al. [
18,
19] in the framework of automata theory, proving the following result.
Theorem 3. Let H be a non-empty set [19]. For every  define . Then  is a join hypergroup.  G.G. Massouros called this hyperstructure a B-hypergroup, after the binary result that the hyperoperation gives.
Example 1. Consider  defined by the following Cayley table|  | 1 | 2 | 3 | 
| 1 | 1 | 1 | {1,3} | 
| 2 | {1,2} | 2 | {2,3} | 
| 3 | {1,3} | 3 | 3 | 
 Then S is a breakable semihypergroup.
 Example 2. Consider  defined by the following Cayley table|  | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 
| 1 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 
| 2 | 2 | 2 | {2,3} | 2 | {2,5} | 
| 3 | 3 | {2,3} | 3 | 3 | {3,5} | 
| 4 | 4 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 
| 5 | 5 | {2,5} | {3,5} | 5 | 5 | 
 Then S is a breakable semihypergroup.
 Notice that in both examples the hyperoperation is extensive. Moreover, both are semihypergroups, but not hypergroups, since the reproduction axiom does not hold. The next theorem gives a characterization of breakable hypergroups.
Theorem 4. A hypergroup  is breakable if and only if it is a B-hypergroup.
 Proof.  First, suppose that  is a breakable hypergroup. For any two distinct elements x and y of H, by left reproducibility, there exists  such that . Since H is breakable, it follows that  is a subsemihypergroup, so . It follows that  and thus . Therefore . Similarly, using the right reproducibility, one proves that . So we obtain , i.e.,  is a B-hypergroup.
Conversely, the other implication is evident. □
 Similarly to the classic case, one can characterize the breakable semihypergroups using the associated power semigroup.
Theorem 5. Let  be a semihypergroup. Then the following assertions hold:
- (I)
-  is a semigroup, where the binary operation  is defined by: 
- (II)
-  is breakable if and only if  is idempotent. 
 Proof.  - (I)
- The binary operation  -  is associative since, for every non empty subsets  -  of  S-  we have
             
- (II)
- Let  be breakable and . Then A is a subsemihypergroup of S, that is . On the other hand, for every  we have . Thus , so  is idempotent. Conversely, suppose that  is idempotent. Then, for every non empty subset A of S, we have , so A is a subsemihypergroup, meaning that S is breakable.  □ 
 Proposition 1. The fundamental semigroup of a breakable semihypergroup is breakable, too.
 Proof.  Let S be a breakable semihypergroup and  the associated fundamental semigroup. We know that, for , , whenever , because  is breakable. So , meaning that  is breakable, too. □
 Now it is the time to go back to Rédei’s theorem and try to find a generalization in the broader context of semihypergroups. Notice here the significance of the notion of semi-symmetric semihypergroup.
Theorem 6. A semi-symmetric semihypergroup  is breakable if and only if it can be partitioned into classes, i.e., , where Γ is a chain and all  are pairwise disjoint l-semigroups, r-semigroups or B-hypergroups. Moreover, for every  and , with , we have .
 Proof.  “⟹” Suppose that 
 is a breakable semi-symmetric semihypergroup. Then, for any 
, the sets 
 and 
 are semi-symmetric semihypergroups, so
        
		and
        
We will prove the theorem in several steps.
Step 1. First we define on 
S three relations as follows:
        
In [
1], it was proved that 
 and 
 are equivalences. We show now that also 
 is an equivalence. The reflexivity holds because of (
1) and the simmetry is evident. For proving the transitivity, take 
 such that 
 and 
, thus
        
Thus  (because S is breakable), implying that , i.e., . Therefore,  is an equivalence relation on S.
Define the corresponding partitions of 
S related to 
 and 
 by 
 and 
, respectively. Based on relations (
3)–(
5), we can notice that each class in 
, 
 and 
 is a maximal l-semigroup, r-semigroup and 
B-hypergroup, respectively. Indeed, for example, let 
H be a 
B-subhypergroup such that 
, where 
. Then, for every 
, we have 
, meaning that 
, so 
. Thus the class 
 represented by 
x is maximal.
Step 2. We show that if any two classes of 
 or 
 have a common element, then one of them contains only one element. Let us assume, in contrast, that there exist two classes 
 and 
, both with more than one element, such that 
. Thus there exists 
. It means that 
 is an l-semigroup and 
 is a 
B-hypergroup. Then
        
		and
        
On the other hand, because of (
2), we have 
 or 
. If 
, using (
6), we get 
, which is impossible, because 
. If 
, then by (
7), we have 
, so 
, which is again a contradiction, because of (
2). Similarly, the other cases can be verified.
Step 3. Based on the assertion proved in the previous step, we may define on S a new partition: we take the classes, of cardinality at least 2, of  and , and then the singleton classes of all the other elements of S (we read here that all the other elements are put each one in a different class). We denote the corresponding equivalence relation by ∼ and the class of x with respect to ∼ by .
Take 
x and 
y from two different classes, i.e., 
. Since 
S is a breakable semihypergroup, it follows that 
 is a subsemihypergroup, so relation (
2) is verified. If 
, then since 
S is semi-symmetric, it follows that 
 or 
. If 
, it means that 
 and thus 
, which is false. So 
. Similarly, if 
 it follows that 
. Thereby, for 
, we get
        
Step 4. We show that for any different elements 
 of 
S such that 
, we have
        
		for 
. Since 
, the set 
 is an l-semigroup, an r-semigroup or a 
B-hypergroup. Let us assume that 
 is an l-semigroup, i.e., we have 
 and 
. Besides, from (
8), we have 
, for 
.
Now, by contrast, if we suppose that the assertion is false, then, because of (
2) with a suitably order, we have
        
Hence 
, which is a contradiction, so relation (
9) is now proved. Similarly, relation (
9) holds whenever 
 is an r-semigroup or a 
B-hypergroup.
Step 5. On the set of all classes 
 define an ordering relation < as follows:
        
First we prove that the relation is well-defined, i.e., it does not depend on the representatives 
x and 
y. Take 
 and 
. By using (
9) for 
 and 
y, then for 
 and 
, respectively, we get 
 and 
.
The reflexivity and the symmetry are evident. It remains to prove the transitivity. Assume that  and . By definition of <, these two relations mean that  and . It follows that  and similarly, , meaning that .
Besides, from (
8), for 
, it follows that either 
 or 
 always holds, so the order < is total.
“⟸” The converse implication is obvious.
Now the proof is completed. □
 Remark 1. The structure of the proof of Theorem 6 is similar to that one proposed by Rédei [1] for the decomposition of breakable semigroups, but it was obviously extended to hyperstructure environment. Moreover, in the original proof, Rédei considered in Step 3 a different partition of the initial semigroup S, i.e., he considered the classes of cardinality at least 2 of  and , and then the class of all the other elements of S. But doing in this way, not all the breakable semigroups are decomposed as is requested by Theorem 1, as we can notice here below. Consider on the set  the operation . It is clear that S is a breakable semigroup and using the above mentioned partition, we have to consider 1 and 2 in the same class (the last one, “of all the other elements,” let’s say), since 1 and 2 are not equivalent with respect to both relations  and . So the partition will be , which is not an l-semigroup or an r-semigroup, obtaining thus a contradiction. On the other way, if we consider the partition of S as in Theorem 6 in Step 3, i.e., we take the classes, of cardinality at least 2, of  and , and then the singleton classes of all the other elements of S, we get another partition of S as , where  and , both being l-semigroups (or r-semigroups), so Rédei’s theorem is verified also in this particular case.
 In the following examples we will show the decomposition of some breakable semihypergroups obtained using Theorem 6.
Example 3. Let , ,  be a l-semigroup and  be a B-hypergroup. Then  is a breakable semihypergroup with the following Cayley table:|  | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 
| 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 4 | 
| 2 | 2 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 
| 3 | 3 | 3 | 3 | {3,4} | 
| 4 | 4 | 4 | {3,4} | 4 | 
  Example 4. Let , ,  and  be B-hypergroups,  be an l-semigroup and  be an r-semigroup. Then  is a breakable semihypergroup with the following Cayley table:|  | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 
| 1 | 1 | {1,2} | {1,3} | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 
| 2 | {1,2} | 2 | {2,3} | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 
| 3 | {1,3} | {2,3} | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 
| 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 
| 5 | 5 | 5 | 5 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 
| 6 | 6 | 6 | 6 | 6 | 6 | 6 | {6,7} | 8 | 9 | 
| 7 | 7 | 7 | 7 | 7 | 7 | {6,7} | 7 | 8 | 9 | 
| 8 | 8 | 8 | 8 | 8 | 8 | 8 | 8 | 8 | 8 | 
| 9 | 9 | 9 | 9 | 9 | 9 | 9 | 9 | 9 | 9 | 
  Example 5. Consider the following binary hyperoperation on the set of integers: Then  is a breakable semihypergroup, since it is sufficient to take , with ,  as an l-semigroup,  as an r-semigroup and  as a B-hypergroup.
 The notion of ideal of a semigroup was extended to the hyperstructures for the first time by Hasankhani [
20], defining the concept of 
left (right) ideal in a hypergroupoid, that was after changed into 
hyperideal, in order to keep the meaning of the hyperoperation.
Definition 4. Let  be a hypergroupoid. A non empty set A of H is called a left hyperideal if, for , it follows that  for any . Similarly, A is a right hyperideal if, for , it follows that  for any . Moreover A is called a hyperideal of H if it is both a left and a right hyperideal.
 Theorem 7. Let S be a breakable semi-symmetric semihypergroup. Then the set of all hyperideals of S together with the inclusion is a chain.
 Proof.  Let 
 be a breakable semi-symmetric semihypergroup. Then by Theorem 6, there exists an equivalence relation ∼ on 
S such that the set of classes 
 with respect to it can be ordered in such a way that, for every distinct classes 
 and 
, we have
        
Please note that the definition of 
 is equivalent with
        
We claim that, if 
I is a hyperideal of 
S, then
        
Indeed, for every , where , we have , so the claim is proved.
Furthermore, (
11) implies that, for every hyperideal 
I of 
S, we have
        
		hence 
.
Now, let 
I and 
J be distinct hyperideals of 
S. We will prove that either 
 or 
. To do this, first we will show that either 
 or 
, i.e., just one of the assertions holds. In contrast, let us suppose that 
 and 
, therefore there exist 
 and 
. From (
13) it follows that
        
Indeed, if , with , then  (since J is a hyperideal), which is false. So , for any . Similarly the other relation holds. This implies that  and , hence , which is impossible.
Thereby, for two distinct hyperideals 
I and 
J, we have either 
 or 
. Without loss of generality, let 
 and take 
. Then, by (
14), we have 
, with 
; this implies that 
, thus 
. Similarly, if 
, then 
. We can conclude thus, that the set of the hyperideals of 
S is a chain with respect to the inclusion. □
 Corollary 1. The set of all ideals of a breakable semigroup is a chain.