The old school bipolar sensors seem to be around 1 degC
accuracy ("available" - so binned out for higher price if that's
your pony). Curvature is variable and the accuracy blows out,
outside the 0-70C range. That's inherent to a bandgap
reference (although mine with thin film metal resistors have
a fraction of the curvature, the bit left that pertains to the
transistors' Rb, but the Pbase resistors commonly used
contribute most of the nonlinearity in common versions).
Always begin by questioning the difficult attribute specs,
including "why?". In my experience I have not once cared
about decimal points of temperature (in my world we just
sandbag a forcing temp to ensure it meets a MIL method
tolerance window that's more based on ordinary equipment
capability).
Now maybe some clever marketing person thinks that
enhanced temperature resolution & accuracy will win sales.
Or maybe you received the spec from a customer who's
always right. There may well be reasons.
But they are not necessarily good or achievable at a cost
that's going to not-tank your plan, and "self-care" means
not signing up for impossible or stupid stuff.