There is no correct answer here depends on several factors, type of equipment used, what type of paper it is made and basis weight of the sheet among other things. Typical numbers are that it requires between 2000 (7500 liters) and 10,000 gallons (38,000 liters) of water to manufacture a ton of paper.
By O.1 % or less due to moisture content of the air.
Yes!If wood absorb water,paper will as paper is made of wood.
yes it can cus if you wet it and wring it water comes out
when water comes in contact with paper, the paper get wet and soggy, it sometimes turns soft.
2,500-6,000 gallons
The water dissolves the paper molecules.
to much
Individual plastic bags cost about one-third as much as the average paper sack.
Paper being produced is a major sign of tree destruction, it require about 3 miles of trees just to make the paper for cigarettes, imagine how much is required in order to make simple boxes. Paper has good and bad effects, the bad are a bit more extreme than the good, but all the same, paper is just like any other topic, it has multiple results.
Wax repels water/liquid, it doesn't absorb it, so the water forms droplets.
One gallon of water
one single sheet of copy paper can use over 13oz. of water
It takes a lot of water to change wood chips into paper. It takes much less water to make paper out of recycled paper. It's a much easier process.
A paper towel holds 2 pounds and 5 ounces of water.
Bounty paper towels holds 30 mL of water
For the production of one piece of A4-paper 10 litres of water is used. I found this on http://www.waterfootprint.org/page=files/productgallery&product=paper
321cups
You can us 10.
1/4 of a cup of water.
Maybe 20 Or 40.
Depends on the size and quality of the paper.
The wax paper is hydrophobic.