WWCY said:
Can phonons be thought of as a quantised wave of sound,
This is analogous to saying something along the lines of 'can electromagnetic radiation be thought of as quantised waves of visible light.' Yes electromagnetic radiation travels as quantized waves (photons), however visible light only takes up a small bandwidth of this spectrum. Similarly, lattice vibrations are quantized waves (phonons), however sound only makes up a small bandwidth of the full spectrum of vibrations.
WWCY said:
Can phonons be thought of as a quantised wave of sound, in the same manner photons being a quantised light wave?
Perhaps the closest relationship between phonons and photons is that they are both Goldstone bosons produced by spontaneously breaking an underlying symmetry. Photons are the Goldstone mode generated by the breakdown of guauge symmetry in quantum electrodynamics. Whereas phonons in a solid are the result of breaking translational and rotational symmetry when you freeze the atoms into a crystal. A word of caution here, although this is the closest relationship, some may not find it the cleanest. Namely, there is quite a bit of argument as to whether photons should truly be considered Goldstone bosons. Unpacking this is bit too off topic and also too far removed from my field of study for me to give it a proper treatment anyways. However, everyone agrees that lattice vibrations are quantized as phonons, that these phonons are a Goldstone boson, and that they travel with a crystal momentun through the lattice and transport energy along the way. From this point of view, they can clearly be classified as particles. However, there is no escaping the fact that at there very core they exist as a disturbance of the lattice with finite spatial extent. Thus, from this point of view they are also a wave, and so at the end of the day we have a similar wave particle duality picture at play.
WWCY said:
Also, can they be taken as particles of sound in the same way that photons can be particles of light?
The two above answers also answer this question.
WWCY said:
My text states the following (assuming that this is a system with real-space lattice of ##a##):
"If 3 phonons each with crystal momentum ##\hbar (2/3) \pi /a## scatter off each other, they can produce 3 phonons each with a crystal momentum of ##\hbar (-2/3) \pi /a##"
Here, is crystal momentum conserved because the collision produces 3 extra phonons in addition to the original 3 and therefore gives a total final crystal momentum of ##0## (which is the same as having a crystal momentum of ##3 \hbar \frac{2\pi}{3 a}## in this system)? Or is crystal momentum because the 3 initial phonons "turn into" 3 phonons of crystal momentum ##3 \hbar \frac{-2\pi}{3 a}##, which is also the same as having the initial crystal momentum of ##3 \hbar \frac{2\pi}{3 a}##?
Conservation of crystal momentum requires
##\sum_{i=1}^3 \mathbf k_{i} = \sum_{i=1} ^3 \mathbf k'_{i} + \mathbf K##
Where ##\mathbf k## is the phonons wavevectors which is related to the crystal momentum by ##\mathbf p = \hbar \mathbf k## and ##\mathbf K## is some reciprocal lattice vector which can be written as ##\mathbf K = \frac{2\pi n}{a}##
Our goal is to find an integer n that satisfies this equation
We can immediately identify that ##\mathbf k_{i} = \frac{2\pi}{3a}## for each initial phonon and ##\mathbf k'_{i} = -\frac{2\pi}{3a}##
Thus, we may now write
##\sum_{i=1}^3 \left( \frac{2\pi}{3a} \right) = \sum_{i=1}^3 \left( -\frac{2\pi}{3a} \right) + \frac{2\pi n}{a}##
##\frac{2\pi}{a} = -\frac{2\pi}{a} + \frac{2\pi n}{a}##
##n = 2##
The key point here is that crystal momentum, although similar to real momentum, follows a slightly different conservation rule. Namely, conservation is always satisfied when the initial and final sums are equal up to a reciprocal lattice vector. I think your confusion stemmed from applying real momentum conservation. You may ask, "why is crystal momentum conservation different?" The answer is that real and crystal momentum conservation both stem from Hamiltonian symmetries. The additional flexibility in crystal momentum conservation is due to the periodicity of the lattice, thus a plane deformation ##\mathbf u (\mathbf R )## at location ##\mathbf R## repeats identically if you translate by a Bravais lattice vector ##\mathbf R_{0}##. ie: ##\mathbf u (\mathbf R ) \to \mathbf u (\mathbf R -\mathbf R_{0} )##