Thanks for going easy on me Bob ... a case of more haste, less speed! I 
focussed on low long-term drift specs without realising I had turned up a 
voltage reference, sorry.

However, I have found some YSI glass encased thermistors that have long-term 
drift specs of <10mK at 25C and 75C over a period of 100 months. They are in 
the YSI 46000 series - data sheet attached.

http://www.farnell.com/datasheets/169207.pdf

There is an interesting paper by NIST on achieving the International 
Temperature scale - link attached (it is 196 pages and 10MB) that seems to 
indicate platinum sensors are the most stable at less than 1mK and, of course, 
to be able to measure these resistors accurately, you need an equally low-drift 
voltage/current source. :-)

https://nvlpubs.nist.gov/nistpubs/Legacy/TN/nbstechnicalnote1265.pdf

This reference appeared from an EEVblog where I think some Volt-nuts were 
discussing temperature. One of them confirmed that the most economical way was 
to have a group of lower-cost sensors and characterise them.

https://www.eevblog.com/forum/metrology/long-term-stability-of-temperature-sensors/

John 


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