Consistent dimer models on surfaces with boundary

Jonah Berggren, Khrystyna Serhiyenko

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

A dimer model is a quiver with faces embedded in a surface. We define and investigate notions of consistency for dimer models on general surfaces with boundary which restrict to well-studied consistency conditions in the disk and torus case. We define weak consistency in terms of the associated dimer algebra and show that it is equivalent to the absence of bad configurations on the strand diagram. In the disk and torus case, weakly consistent models are nondegenerate, meaning that every arrow is contained in a perfect matching; this is not true for general surfaces. Strong consistency is defined to require weak consistency as well as nondegeneracy. We prove that the completed as well as the noncompleted dimer algebra of a strongly consistent dimer model are bimodule internally 3-Calabi-Yau with respect to their boundary idempotents. As a consequence, the Gorenstein-projective module category of the completed boundary algebra of suitable dimer models categorifies the cluster algebra given by their underlying quiver. We provide additional consequences of weak and strong consistency, including that one may reduce a strongly consistent dimer model by removing digons and that consistency behaves well under taking dimer submodels.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere114
JournalForum of Mathematics, Sigma
Volume13
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 10 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s), 2025.

Funding

The authors were supported by the NSF grant DMS-2054255.

FundersFunder number
National Science Foundation Arctic Social Science ProgramDMS-2054255

    Keywords

    • 13F60, 18N25, 14D21
    • 16G20; Secondary
    • Primary

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Analysis
    • Theoretical Computer Science
    • Algebra and Number Theory
    • Statistics and Probability
    • Mathematical Physics
    • Geometry and Topology
    • Discrete Mathematics and Combinatorics
    • Computational Mathematics

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