I think this is not about buying some parts but about know-how. Just happened to read about "compression seals" and "matched seals". Reminds me of my early days at PTB. It can take a life to build up a serious physics setup. There needs to be some clean room level and still humidity can evaporate from metal surfaces.
Looking at the humidity controlled bags we get when ordering certain parts from Farnell or Digikey, i think epoxy seals should be good enough and way better than using connectors. Desiccant inside ovenized hermetic enclosures still has its surprises for me. For example some people believe they should insert old used desiccant bags in order to enforce stable humidity right from the start. But that just isn't true. At least we now have those I2C sensors to monitor humidity inside a hermetic enclosure.
For the AD587 you just get the ceramic package and that's it. In comparison to a LTZ1000 it's a pretty noisy reference, even when you connected a good noise suppression cap. Geller had a patent for running the AD587 gain stage with a low noise zener.
Regards, Dieter
Dieter
Humidity is a tricky problem , oxygen is another
To reach a very low level of humidity there is some parameters to consider
The enclosure
The ambient atmosphere
The trapped humidity in the board ( under the IC , under the compoents , inside / between the wire ...)
The process I use on measuring equipment
I place all the parts in a pressure cooker , I warm at 75 deg C
I connect the pressure cooker to a vacuum pump
I open the valve to shallow the air / humidity inside the pressure cooker
I close the vacuum valve
I open the Nitrogen injection valve to fill the pressure cooker
I close the Nitrogen valve
At this level the parts are dry and in a Nitrogen atmosphere supposed with very low Oxygen level ( IF Nitrogen is over 99.99 ) be aware of lw quality Nitrogen as used to inflate tyres
I place the pressure cooker in a glove box ( keep dry with desiccant )
I open the pressure cooker
I can complete the assembly in a very dry place
After assy completion
I can flush and fill the enclosure with argon or nitrogen and remove from the glove box.
Right now I will not use this way I will just flush the enclosure on preliminary dried parts just to check if ''all is OK '' as a complete process is quite time consuming and my glove box is in use for another project
From a general view : humidity is a true nightmare and very difficult to measure at low level
Regards
OS