Rajesh Kumar, it might reassure you to know that most publishers permit use of copyrighted material as long as use of that material is not for subsequent financial gain. Furthermore, in my experience, it is usually quite easy to obtain permission to use copyrighted material.
Dear Rajesh, thank you for asking this important technical question which is certainly of broad general interest to many RG members. Copyright permission must be obtained e.g. when you use a Figure taken from an original research paper in a book chapter or a review article. I fully agree with Robert Trevethan in that obtaining permission to use copyrighted material is very easy nowadays. I only have experience with chemical journals, but there will be no major difference in physics journals. When you access an article online, you will normally find a button named "Rights and Permissions". When you click on this button you will come to a page like "RightsLink" or similar. There you are asked to answer a few questions such as if you are the author of new work (review artcile) and if it's non-commercial etc. If your are working in academia, copyright permission is normally granted for free (see the attached example). In any case make sure to add a Figure caption in your review article like e.g. "Reproduced with permission from Ref. [17]. Copyright 2017 Wiley-VCH."