The answer to your question is pleasantly general and simple. Given a completely general scheme $X$ (no noetherian, separation, ...hypothesis) and an arbitrary closed subspace $F\subset |X|$ of its underlying topological space, there is a *unique* closed reduced subscheme $Y\subset X$ whose underlying set is $|Y|=F$. Here is the proof: i) If $X=Spec A$ is affine, $Y$ is given by the reduced ideal $I=\bigcap_{x\in F} j_x \;$ [as usual, for $x\in SpecA, j_x \subset A$ denotes the ideal corresponding to the point $x$], ii) If $X$ is not affine, the reduced scheme $Y=V_{sch}(\mathcal I)$ is obtained by the unique ideal sheaf $\mathcal I\subset \mathcal O_X$ restricting on each open affine $U=Spec A$ to the ideal sheaf $\tilde I$ associated to the $I$ above. **Reference** EGA 1, Chap.1 , §5, *Proposition* (5.2.1)