You didn't mention what sort of detection fidelity you are looking for? Just checking for some kind of sound "pressure" change may be entirely adequate for your needs, honestly.
Keep in mind however that bumps to the phone might end up being a very low frequency and fairly high-powered impulse such that it will trigger you detector even though it was not an actual clap. Ditto for very high frequency sound sources that are also not likely to be a clap.
Is this ok for your needs?
If not and you are hoping for something higher fidelity, I think you'd be better of doing a spectral analysis (FFT) of the input signal and then looking in a much narrower frequency band for a sharp signal spike, similar to the part you already have.
I haven't looked closely at this source, but here's some possible open source FFT code you could hopefully use as-is for your iphone app:
Edit:
https://github.com/alexbw/iPhoneFFT
The nice part about graphing the spectral result is that it should make it quite easy to tune which frequency range you actually care about. In my own tests with some laptop software I have, my claps have a very strong spike around 1kHz - 2kHz.
Possibly overkill for you needs, but if you need something higher fidelity, then I suspect you will not be satisfied with simply tracking a signal spike without knowing what frequency range led to the signal spike in the first place.
Cheers
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