Every Boolean ring satisfies for all in , because we know : and since is an abelian group, we can subtract from both sides of this equation, which gives . A similar proof shows that every Boolean ring is
commutative: : and this yields , which means (using the first property above). The property shows that any Boolean ring is an
associative algebra over the
field with two elements, in precisely one way. In particular, any finite Boolean ring has as
cardinality a
power of two. Not every unital associative algebra over is a Boolean ring: consider for instance the
polynomial ring . The quotient ring of any Boolean ring modulo any ideal is again a Boolean ring. Likewise, any
subring of a Boolean ring is a Boolean ring. Any
localization of a Boolean ring by a set is a Boolean ring, since every element in the localization is idempotent. The maximal ring of quotients (in the sense of Utumi and
Lambek) of a Boolean ring is a Boolean ring, since every partial endomorphism is idempotent. Every
prime ideal in a Boolean ring is
maximal: the
quotient ring is an
integral domain and also a Boolean ring, so it is isomorphic to the
field , which shows the maximality of . Since maximal ideals are always prime, prime ideals and maximal ideals coincide in Boolean rings. Every finitely generated ideal of a Boolean ring is
principal (indeed, . Furthermore, as all elements are idempotents, Boolean rings are commutative
von Neumann regular rings and hence absolutely flat, which means that every module over them is
flat. == Unification ==