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.
The interaction between wax paper and water is more related to adhesion than cohesion. Water molecules are attracted to the wax molecules in the paper, causing the water to spread out and stick to the surface of the paper. This adhesion is what makes water bead up or stick to wax paper.
The water dissolves the paper molecules.
The ratio of water in a dry paper is typically measured using terms such as percent moisture content or water content. This is calculated by dividing the mass of water in the paper by the mass of the dry paper and expressing it as a percentage.
intermolecular forces
The surface tension of water causes it to bead up and resist being absorbed by the wax paper. This occurs because the cohesive forces between water molecules are stronger than the adhesive forces between water and wax paper. As a result, the water drop appears to sit on the surface of the paper without sinking.
It takes about 2.5 gallons of water to make one sheet of Bounty paper towel.
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.
It takes approximately 10 liters of water to produce one kilogram of tissue paper. This amount can vary depending on the specific production process and the source of the water used.
There are paper plants which has Zero Effluent Discharge. That means these plants reuse and re-circulate all their water. If no water is reused and/or re-circulated, plant may use as much as 300 - 400 ton or cubic meter of water to make one ton of paper. Most of water efficient plant in North America and Europe uses 10 to 25 ton or m3 of water per ton of paper. In English unit one ton (2000 lbs) paper will need 2500 to 6000 gallon.
About 10 liters of water are used to produce one piece of paper. The paper-making process involves significant water usage for tasks like pulping, bleaching, and rinsing. Efforts are being made in the industry to reduce water consumption through recycling and more efficient production methods.
It takes about 25,000-30,000 gallons of water to produce one ton of paper through the papermaking process, including the evaporation of water during the drying stage. The actual amount can vary depending on the type of paper and production methods used.
A paper towel holds 2 pounds and 5 ounces of water.
Bounty paper towels holds 30 mL of water
It takes about 10 liters of water to produce a single sheet of paper through the papermaking process. This includes the water used to process the wood pulp, clean the machinery, and in the paper drying process.
321cups
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
It takes 1 tree to make a paper bag. But it is saving if you don't use them if you don't you save billions of trees.That is an overstatement of someone not understanding how it works. Most trees cut are used to make lumber to built houses, 50% of the tree (residuals) make wood chips to make paper, diaper, magazines, cups, box etc. Finally wood is a renewable resource that is most helpful to the environment WHILE it is growing. Plastic is NOT renewable, so is steel.