This list is a list of active ingredients only. You will not find product names available at your local grocery store on this list. But there is a way to check that your product is on the list. EPA registration numbers are required by law to be on every product label making claims as a disinfectant. The database is searchable, look for this image

You only need to type in the first two sets of numbers separated by one dash. The rest of the digits are more specific and unnecessary for your use.
The product name category is the name the manufacturing company markets its active to other manufacturers, business to business. Not a name familiar to consumers. However, you can get more information about this product by googling those names.
Notice the contact time column. Are you following the label directions for contact time? If not, you are wasting product and money. This is how long it takes for this product to kill all (99%) of the organisms listed on the label that that product is effective against. Since our eyes cannot see microscopically, we need to rely on product labels to protect us. So, clean your babies highchair tray, allow product to fully perform its function. Dry the tray so that your beautiful child does not ingest any of this product. Then and only then place child and tray on highchair. Same procedure for older children and adults.
The last column (not in order) is which set of label directions to follow. In scanning only, the first of 17 pages of the list on my computer, the directions tell you to follow the directions for other viruses. This at least makes sense.
Killing these organisms completely takes time. There is no instantaneous way to do this. I know I sound like an advocate for reading labels, but it really is the best way to protect yourself and your family. If the product label is hard to read, look it up online. Amazon is a good source for label instructions.
https://www.epa.gov/pesticide-registration/list-n-disinfectants-use-against-sars-cov-2