From nCatlab https://ncatlab.org/nlab/show/braiding :
Any braided monoidal category has a natural isomorphism
$$B_{x,y} \;\colon\; x \otimes y \to y \otimes x $$
called the braiding.
A braided monoidal category is symmetric if and only if $B_{x,y}$ and $B_{y,x}$ are inverses (although they are isomorphisms regardless).
This all makes sense, but I'm struggling to think of an instance where you would want to work with an asymmetric braiding. It's plain to me that they can exist, but ... are there any useful examples?
I got to this page from https://ncatlab.org/nlab/show/associative+unital+algebra where it was stating
Moreover, if $(\mathcal{C}, \otimes , 1)$ has the structure of a symmetric monoidal category $(\mathcal{C}, \otimes, 1, B)$ with symmetric braiding $\tau$, then a monoid $(A,\mu, e)$ as above is called a commutative monoid in $(\mathcal{C}, \otimes, 1, B)$ if in addition... [diagram here]
I was also wondering if this was necessary, the symmetry in the braiding. If the braiding was asymmetric, but $\mu \circ B_{x,y} = \mu = \mu \circ (B_{y,x})^{-1}$, we can still make sense of the multiplication being commutative. It seems we could make useful statements about the algebra, even with a strange braiding like. Are there any examples of this, either?