“…The interaction of hydrogen and pure carbon in amorphous or crystalline allotrope forms has been studied in a variety of contexts including interstellar catalysis [1], hydrogen storage [2], quantum fluids [3,4] and tunable nanomaterials [5,6]. Early studies of H 2 on graphite have explored a variety of gas/liquid/solid phase transitions at low temperature (< 20K) and low coverage (< 1 monolayer) [7,8], and similar behavior has been predicted for H 2 /graphene [9]. The interaction with atomic hydrogen is also of considerable interest for tuning graphene's electronic, magnetic, and chemical properties for a variety of applications.…”