Total gate charge Qgtot is directly available.
One Coulomb is equal to A*s.
Rest is left as homework. Tip: if you have trouble with it, don't worry, it's really too simple. The solution should fit on one line.
This being said, it will be an approximation with some assumptions. The Qgtot is measured at some specific Vgs, and you may be using different Vgs.
If any of this really matters, you can make things better using a modern MOSFET. IRFZ44 has massive gate charge compared to its power handling. Modern parts have better ratios.
I am talking about dynamic comcuption my Dear friend.So I am concern that about peak current of mosfet gate charge. I mean, now I am designing BMS(battery managment system) for li ion so I am using 8 pieces of mosfets to charge batteries.As we know to drive those mosfets we need mosfet driver and voltage regulators. If I know peak current (not avarage current) of mosfet gate charge , I pick voltage regulator and mosfet according to peak curent of mosfet gate charge .
There is some misunderstanding here. If you ask about peak current, then:
1. You can control it with gate resistor (this also controls rise/fall times and ultimately switching speed). There are pitfalls - too high current may cause ringing, too low current may cause other problems (higher power dissipation, high dv/dt susceptibility). Sometimes you want asymetrical drive.
2. Generally you don't need to worry about peak current while picking voltage regulator (mosfet driver supply I assume?), you just add some capacitance, most importantly - small mlcc capacitor which has low impedance at high frequencies to supply these short, high surges of current. Average current is usually quite small.
By the way What was the max frequency you have driven mosfet without facing any problem?
From your question, it seems to me, that you have some misconceptions. There are many problems which you may face driving mosfets (ringing, dv/dt effects, etc), it is not that there is just some frequency at which problems starts. Of course, there will be some frequency limit based on rise/fall times and switching speed of particular mosfet, but it is not a proper way to look at it (usually). Most important thing to keep in mind is just that for any given switching speed, increase in frequency will increase power dissipation inside mosfet, because mosfet is spending more time in linear region.