That depends upon the density of the paper.
16 sheets of A4 paper make exactly 1 sq m.
Manufacturers make paper in varying thickness as specified by the density in grams per square metre (gsm). The usual densities are 60 gsm, 70 gsm, 80 gsm, 90 gsm. These lead to weights of:
60 gsm → 500 x 60/16 = 1875 g = 1.875 kg = 1 7/8 kg
70 gsm → 500 x 70/16 = 2187.5 g = 2.1875 kg = 2 3/16 kg
80 gsm → 500 x 80/16 = 2500 g = 2.5 kg = 2 1/2 kg
90 gsm → 500 x 90/16 = 2812.5 g = 2.8125 kg = 2 13/16 kg
A4 is approximately 297 mm by 210mm and has an area of exactly 1/16 sq m = 0.0625 sq m = 625 sq cm
The A series of paper is based on the fact that they all have the same ratio of width to length. Also for the next size up:
1) its width is half the previous size's length;
2) its length is the previous size's width; and, thus
3) its area is exactly half that of the previous size.
A0 was chosen so that its area is exactly 1 sq m. From the above
A0 has size length by width = √√2 m by 1/√√2 m = √√2 m by (√√8)/2 m ≈ 1.189 m by 0.841 m = 1189 mm by 841 mm
In general, for size An:
* where n is even (A0, A2, A4, ...), ie n = 2k for k = 0, 1, 2, ...: An has size (√√2)/(2^k) m by (√√8)/(2^(k+1) m
* where n is odd (A1, A3, A5, ...), ie n = 2k - 1 for k = 1, 2, 3, ...: An has size (√√8)/(2^k) m by (√√2)/(2^k) m
* area = (1/2)^n sq m
Thus for A4: 4 = 2x2 → the size is (√√2)/(2^2) m by (√√8)/(2^(2+1)) m = (√√2)/4 m by (√√8)/8 m ≈ 0.297 m by 0.210 m = 297 mm by 210 mm
Area = (1/2)^4 sq m = 1/16 sq m = 0.0625 sq m = 625 sq cm.
The weight of 500 sheets of 70 gsm paper would be approximately 1.75 kilograms.
500 sheets of 80 gsm A4 paper would weigh approximately 2.5 kilograms.
500 sheets of 100gsm A4 paper weigh approximately 2.5 kilograms.
A ream of A4 paper, 80gsm, typically contains 500 sheets and has a thickness of around 5 centimeters (2 inches).
Approx...400reams Paper quality is expressed as weight per area. Office standard A4 is 80 grams per square metre. A sheet of A0 paper has an area of 1 m2, A1 is half the size of A0, A2 half A1, A3 half A2, and A4 half of A3; so there are 16 sheets of A4 to the square metre. Therefore the weight of one sheet of A4 is 80 divided by 16, which is 5 grams. The number of sheets needed to make one kilogram is 1000 divided by 5, which is 200 sheets. One tonne is 1000 kilograms so one tonne of A4 would need 200 000 sheets. A ream of paper is 500 sheets, so 200 000 sheets is 400 reams.
You did not mention paper size, so I am assuming A4 which is 29.7cm * 21cm Area of 1 sheet = 29.7cm * 21cm = 623.7 cm^2 = 0.06237 m^2 Area of 500 sheets = 0.06237 * 500 = 31.185 m^2 80gsm means 1 sq metre (m^2) of the paper weighs 80g Since the total area of 500 sheets is 31.185 m^2, so 500 sheets weigh = 31.185 * 80g = 2494.8g = 2.4948kg
Each sheet of A4 is exactly 1/16 sq m in area. A ream holds 500 sheets → a ream of A4 has an area of 500 x 1/16 sq m = 31 1/4 sq m = 31.25 sq m
500
Approximately 5,000 sheets of A4 70gsm copy paper are in one ream. It would take about 500 reams to make one metric ton of A4 70gsm copy paper.
One tonne of paper is equal to 200, 000 sheets of A4 paper. (A number of sites report that it is equal to 40,000 sheets, but simple maths shows they are incorrect: Given...1 A4 page of 80gsm (gsm: Grams per Square Metre) 1m2 = 16 x A4 sheets So... 1 A4 sheets = 80g/16 = 5grams 1 tonne = 1,000,000grams Hence... 1 tonne = 1,000,000/5 A4 sheets = 200,000 A4 sheets)
16 sheets.
The weight of an A4 sheet of paper can vary depending on the thickness and material of the paper. Typically, an A4 sheet of regular printer paper weighs around 5 grams.