“…As a result, C 3 (and also l,c-C 3 H and l,c-C 3 H 2 but at lower levels) is efficiently formed in the gas phase in our model, and can stick on the surface, undergo successive hydrogenations to form closed shell s-C 3 H 4 molecules (s-C 3 H 4 represents C 3 H 4 residing on the grain surface). As, by comparison with the gas phase, these hydrogenation reactions are considered to be barrierless (or with very low barriers) up to s-C 3 H 4 (Mebel et al 1998, Nguyen et al 2001, Mebel & Kaiser 2002, Miller & Klippenstein 2003, Hébrard et al 2013, this is an efficient route for s-C 3 H 4 synthesis (both methylacetylene and allene, but only the methylacetylene isomer is considered in this work). Also by comparison with the gas phase, the subsequent hydrogenation step to s-C 3 H 5 shows a small barrier (Whytock et al 1976, Faravelli et al 2000, Miller et al 2008, Vuitton et al 2012) which can be overcome through tunneling.…”