Cleaning a surface simply takes away visible debris, dirt, and dust. Surface Sanitization makes that exterior sanitary or free of observable dirt contaminants that could influence your health. Surface Sanitization is meant to reduce, not kill, the rate and growth of bacteria, viruses, and fungi. Disinfecting a surface will “kill” the minute organisms as claimed on the label of a particular product.
Cleaning alone will for all time make a payment constructively to the health of indoor occupants since allergens and microorganisms are being removed from the surfaces of the indoor environment. The problem, though, is the risk of cross-contamination. The mopping solution and the cleaning tools could be dispersal disease in the nonexistence of a germicide. When you Surface Sanitization, you are killing and reducing the number of bacteria present by 99.9 percent but responsible nothing for viruses and fungus. Surface Sanitization is better than cleaning unaccompanied but the decrease of pathogen populations on environmental surfaces is exponentially better when you sterilize.
The smallest amount level of effectiveness in a modern-day antiseptic is percent kill of 6 log9/10 of an organism. A Surface Sanitization is only required to reduce that 5/6 log10 down to 3 Log10. We can put that into real numbers. A sanitizer only reduces the number of organisms down to and does not anything about viruses and fungus.