I am at the point where I am actually going to construct the Buck portion.
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Would there be any negative effects of leaving this cap stage in there?
Would there be any positive effects?
In this particular application the main downside of leaving the buck-output/bridge-input capacitor in is the cost/volume of such, though it won't be anywhere near as costly/big as the input capacitor for a width-modulated full bridge (because each bridge leg will be operated very close to 50% duty so it will draw a nearly constant current from the capacitor). Otherwise, there are two other major downsides to the buck voltage-fed bridge, of which only one is relevant here: 1) no intrinsic tolerance of a short on the secondary (irrelevant because the C-W multiplier presents a high impedance load even with its output shorted); much higher turn-on loss in the bridge switches due to bridge input capacitor ensuring voltage remains nearly constant across the switches during the entire turn-on transition, exacerbated by reverse recovery of the anti-parallel diodes because during the dead-time some or all of the primary current will have transitioned to them.
A 10+ stage multiplier on the other side of the transformer isn't exactly a large value output cap..
And most importantly can you be more specific with the overlap?
Hmmm... a 10 stage C-W multiplier is going to have terrible voltage sag and very high ripple under load. Dave, our fearless leader here, did a very good video on C-W multipliers and I encourage you to pay particular attention to the last few minutes where he tests a 4 stage (x8) multiplier under load:
(I guess youtube embedding tags don't work here?) [edit - I guess it does; didn't show up as embedded when I previewed my post...]
Remember, there's no such thing as a free lunch so if you want, say, 150kV at 1A from a 10 stage multiplier you will need to theoretically feed
20A at 7.5kV into the first stage (realistically you will have to feed a lot more that 7.5kV because of voltage sag). You can reduce voltage sag by making the capacitors in the first stage n times bigger than the capacitors in the final stage, where n is the number of stages (edit: and making the capacitors in the 2nd stage n-1 times bigger, etc.), and by using a center-tapped secondary and mirroring a second C-W multiplier on the other leg, which turns this into a full-wave multiplier with the center-tap as the negative output reference. Actually, I should emphasize this much more clearly: you pretty much have to use a full wave multiplier at this power level.
The overlap time for the bridge switches in the current-fed version is not too critical. A somewhat fast-n-loose approach which nevertheless tends to work well with IGBTs (not MOSFETs!) is to simply drive each bridge leg with a straight 50% duty complementary square wave, relying on the turn-off delay time of the IGBTs to ensure there is some overlap. There is a dedicated PWM controller IC for buck voltage- or current-fed
push-pull converters, the LM5041, which lets you select between overlap or dead-time of the push-pull switches; it is very easy to adapt this IC to a full-bridge converter.
edits - additional info; removed erroneous reference to poor transformer utilization (due to my misinterpretation of the half-wave ripple from a C-W multiplier automatically meaning it was a half-wave rectifier, though it is actually full-wave).