(interestingly, they suggest a Linear voltage reference).
These are all far less expensive parts (buffer amps and a precision voltage source) needed to construct the circuit.
Which Linear reference?
I would use a 10V reference (AD587 in CERDIP for long term stability) for this circuit together with a temperature sensor for correction.
Otherwise the most expensive parts will be the resistors to scale the 5V to +/- 10V.
With best regards
Andreas
Thanks for the input. The part that AD suggests is LTZ1000 like quantumvolt wrote. On the eval board that you can *buy* from Analog, there is an unpopulated space for this part, or you can provide your own reference. I've included some circuit diagrams and the image of the board they sell.
I chose an ADR445 as the reference. Was this a bad move? My main motivation was that it was free but still seems to have very good specs. Also, I don't have the precision resistor values needed to precisely double the voltage but I do have matched pairs of .01% Vishay resistors (odd value - 681 ohm) that are allowing me to create a precise -5.000V off the 5.000V source. So I am giving up on -10V/10V and going with -5V/5V, at least the first go-around. I know this is all fishy and is extremely unlikely to get me to the promised land of 1PPM but hopefully that reference is at least stable so I can trim it out in software.
First image, the unpopulated reference on the eval board. Second image, the eval board I am trying to somewhat clone. Third image, general suggested application schematic for the DAC.