I think that Frsy is right - the best way is to choose a relevant graphene reference system and test on that one what is the implications of the different basis set.
100 Ry mesh-cutoff will in almost no case leads to directly wrong results, but before publishing a paper I would test it on 200 Ry.
Regards the basis set, then normally SZP is a good enough choice, however one must always ask oneself, how different is the environment for this element (Carbon/Hydrogen I guess in your case), to the reference environment of the pseudopotential and the atomic state. So therefore if you start calculating on Carbon in complex multi-element cluster of all kind of different weird materials then SZP is not going to make it, however if you are going to calculate on graphene sheets or similar, then i think SZP would be fine, but as Frsy says, try it out.