Algebra in a category

What you are talking about is the notion of monoid in a monoidal category. To show $A$ is a monoid ('algebra'), you need to construct a multiplication map $\mu: A \times A \to A$, that is associative, where $\times$ is the monoidal product for your monoidal category. In an example like a tensor algebra, you already have associativity, so what you need to show is that multiplication is a homomorphism of Yetter-Drinfeld modules.

Information on monoids in monoidal categories can be found on the nlab, or in the massive work of Aguiar and Mahajan on monoidal functors, species, and hopf algebras: http://www.math.cornell.edu/~maguiar/a.pdf.


The answer to the specific situation you describe is as follows: Yes, $T(V)$ is an algebra in Yetter-Drinfeld modules over $H$ (using the concept that Jacob White mentions in his answer, where in addition we also have a $1$, which is a map from the tensor unit to the algebra satisfying the unital property expressed as a commutative diagram). A reference for this fact for $T(V)$ is, for example, [AS, 2.1]. You need to check two things:

  • The multiplication is a map of algebras (you state this condition),
  • The multiplication is a map of coalgebras (this is missing).

In fact, more is true. As $YD_{H}^H$ is a braided monoidal category, we can speak of bialgebra and Hopf algebra objects in it. $T(V)$ is a (graded, braided) Hopf algebra object in this category. This concept is for example defined in [AS, 1.7].

[AS]: Andruskiewitsch, Nicolás; Schneider, Hans-Jürgen. Pointed Hopf algebras. New directions in Hopf algebras, 1--68, Math. Sci. Res. Inst. Publ., 43, Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge, 2002