Biochemical assays that are performed in cuvettes and in the wells of
multi-well plates and that utilize excitation and light emission as
labels for detection are enhanced by an illumination and detection system
that supplies excitation light through an optical fiber that transmits
excitation light from an excitation light source to the cuvette or well.
Emission light produced by the excitation is then collected by a
collimating lens and converted to a signal that is compiled by
conventional software for analysis. The optical fiber and collimating
lens can either be on the same side of the receptacle (generally the open
side) or on opposite sides, i.e., one above and the other below. When the
optical fiber and the collimating lens are both on the open side of the
receptacle, they are arranged such that the direction of travel of the
excitation light and the direction along which the emission light is
collected are not coaxial, and preferably both are at an acute angle to
the axis normal to the mouth of the receptacle. Illumination systems are
also disclosed in which a ultraviolet, visible, or near-infrared light
source is optically coupled to an optical fiber.