A finite-dimensional, unital, associative algebra $A$ over a field $k$ is termed a Frobenius algebra if it is endowed with a nondegenerate bilinear form $\sigma : A \times A \to k$ satisfying the equation $\sigma(a \cdot b, c) = \sigma(a, b \cdot c)$ for all elements $a, b, c \in A$.
A Frobenius subalgebra $B$ of $A$ is defined as a unital subalgebra for which the restriction of $\sigma$ to $B \times B$ remains nondegenerate.
Our investigation focuses on determining whether the poset of Frobenius subalgebras of $A$ can be endowed with a lattice structure. Specifically, we seek to ascertain whether every pair of Frobenius subalgebras of $A$ possesses a unique supremum (join) and a unique infimum (meet) within this poset framework.
Dave Benson provided an example illustrating Frobenius subalgebras whose intersection does not result in a Frobenius subalgebra. Consequently, the meet, if it exists, is not necessarily defined by the intersection.