My case ideally assumes a cylinder of air being compressed from 1 bar to 5 bar with no heat loss during compression, with a single piston doing the compression on all the air at once. After 5 bar the air is only then allowed to cool. Your situation with a bicycle pump is thus modeled from the ideal, since there is no way to tell how much cooling is going on while doing the actual action of pumping.
That temperature would be for a single quick compression with no heat loss.
With your bicycle pump, you have heat loss from the parts of the pump and the bottle. Feel the bottom of the pump and after many strokes and it is quite hot.
Your pressure will be higher for the above reason. The air has already lost some heat while you are pumping up to 5 bar. Therefor , your air in the bottle at 5 bar will be at a lower temperature.
V1 = 3,13 litre
Similarily your amount of air pumped in is also larger somewhat.
> There is lost work due to two reasons:
I put that in there to explain that the work you put into reach the pressure of 5 bar, is lost in two separate processes. One by by letting it cool down. Second by the expansion to the atmosphere.
If you pump up to 5 bar and expand immediately, then the lost work would be only from the expansion to the atmosphere.
In which case the work against the atmosphere would be the same.
The change in temperature drop would be also somewhat, not much, greater, as the enthapy of the compressed air is not the same as in my case. You would have a bit more air expanding into the atmosphere from a slightly higher pressure.
There is an error in my calculation for the lost work.
It should be
Wlost = Patm(Vf-Vi) = 1 bar x ( 1 litre - 3,13 litre ) =
213 Joules
> the gas was allowed a free expansion into the atmosphere.
For a reversible adiabatic compression and expansion there is no heat flow into or out of the system. The work you put in can be (theoretically) recovered by having the gas expand against a resistance. the gas will return to its original pressure, temperature, and volume.
You can try that with your bicycle pump. If the nozzle end is held closed somehow so no air escapes, and you press down and immediately let the handle back up, the handle will return close to its original position. If you push down and hold it there so the heat can flow out, and then let the handle back up, the handle will return to some lower position (ie some lost work). If you push down, hold it there for the heat to flow out, and then reelease the nozzle for the air to flow out, the handlw does not return up at all ( and you have lost all the work you put in ).
I hope that helps out some more.
Edit: It is surprising that this is not part of a textbook example. Everyone has a bicycle pump and wondered about this very same question that is so close to home, so to speak. No one has knocked the analysis yet, so hopefully it passes scrutiny.