Pumice is characterised by chemical, microstructural (SAXS, WAXS, SANS
, WANS) and surface (XPS and BET) analyses. Pumice is used as support
for the preparation of metal catalysts via reaction with diallyl metal
complexes and successive reduction with dihydrogen of the anchored me
tallorganic substrate. Palladium, platinum and Pd-Pt alloys supported
on pumice have been tested for selective hydrogenations of alkadienes
and alkynes in liquid phase under mild conditions. The results suggest
that pumice-supported palladium catalysts, besides having comparable
activity and selectivity as other supported palladium catalysts, maint
ain their efficiency also at high metal dispersions, when other Pd sup
ported catalysts show very low activity. Similar Pt and Pd-Pt catalyst
s are less active and selective, although better than the analogous me
tals on conventional supports. The peculiar behaviour of pumice-suppor
ted metal catalysts is attributed to the presence, on the pumice surfa
ce, of alkali metal ions which, by supplying electron density to the m
etal (very likely through electron-donating metal alkali ions oxygen c
omposites), counterbalance the loss of metallic character usually foun
d in supported metal catalysts at high metal dispersions.