Although other soft actuators have been built using smart materials or phasechanging materials, [8][9][10][11] soft pneumatic actuators have generally been the most used type of soft actuator. Pneumatic artificial muscles (PAMs), also called McKibben muscles, consist of a tubular matrix that expands radially and contract longitudinally upon pressurization, and have been widely used due to their large forces and contraction. [12][13][14] Although they can produce forces up to thousands of Newtons at high pressure and are readily available in the market, their range of motion is limited to ≈36.3% of their initial length. Pleated pneumatic artificial muscles have used pleats or fibers to improve the performance of the actuator. [15][16][17] Embedding sheets or fibers allows the fabrication of structure with complex programmed deformations based on origami structures, [18] and contraction ratios of 50% at 100 kPa were achieved using origami-based chambers with an external fiber mesh. [19] Inverse pneumatic artificial muscles capable of contraction ratios of 75% use the opposite principle where a pressure input elongates the actuator and the contraction stroke is done by deflating the actuator. [20] Using a Buckling elastomer under negative pressure has been developed to produce linear actuators capable of contraction ratios in the 40% range, [21,22] and a film containing a structure with repeated zig-zag patterns under vacuum pressure has been able to produce extremely large contraction ratios over 90%. [23] Extremely lightweight actuators made from plastic films have been developed that can produce sufficient forces for a wide range of applications. The first of these is pouch motors where two films are bonded flat and where the lateral expansion of the films upon inflation causes a longitudinal contraction up to 36% of their original lengths. [24] Films have also been used to develop serial pneumatic artificial muscles (sPAMS) where a long tube is restricted at regular intervals and can produce a contraction ratio up to 40% upon inflation. [25] Both actuators function on the same principle as PAMs but made from much lighter and flexible material.A wide range of robotic continuum manipulators have been developed ranging from tendon-driven manipulators installed on moving vehicles and others that behave as an octopus arm, [26,27] pneumatically and vacuum-driven continuum manipulators, [28] vacuum-driven continuum manipulators composed of stackable modules, [29] fluidic elastomer manipulators, [30] continuum actuators combining tendons and PAM actuators for combined position and stiffness control, [31,32] and sPAMs-driven continuum actuators. [25] Other types of robotic arms have used jointed motions using either inflatable joints with a series of single The performance of soft linear actuators will determine the capabilities of future soft robots, and any actuator that can produce larger deformations and forces with a low weight and using lower pressures could potentially become ubiquitous in the field. In this work,...