Yes, you can request that CoreAudio gives you exclusive access to an audio output device. This is called hogging the device. If you hogged all of the devices, no other application (including the system) would be able to emit any sound.
Something like this would do the trick for a single device:
AudioObjectPropertyAddress HOG_MODE_PROPERTY = { kAudioDevicePropertyHogMode, kAudioObjectPropertyScopeGlobal, kAudioObjectPropertyElementMaster };
AudioDeviceID deviceId = // your audio device ID
pid_t hoggingProcess = -1; // -1 means attempt to acquire exclusive access
UInt32 size = sizeof(pid_t);
AudioObjectSetPropertyData(deviceId, &HOG_MODE_PROPERTY, 0, NULL, size, &hoggingProcess);
assert(hoggingProcess == getpid()); // check that you have exclusive access
Hog mode works by setting an AudioObject property called kAudioDevicePropertyHogMode. The value of the property is -1 if the device is not hogged. If it is hogged the value is the process id of the hogging process.
If you jump to definition on kAudioDevicePropertyHogMode in Xcode you can read the header doc for the hog mode property. That is the best way to learn about how this property (and pretty much anything and everything else in CoreAudio) works.
For completeness, here's the header doc:
A pid_t indicating the process that currently owns exclusive access to the
AudioDevice or a value of -1 indicating that the device is currently
available to all processes. If the AudioDevice is in a non-mixable mode,
the HAL will automatically take hog mode on behalf of the first process to
start an IOProc.
Note that when setting this property, the value passed in is ignored. If
another process owns exclusive access, that remains unchanged. If the
current process owns exclusive access, it is released and made available to
all processes again. If no process has exclusive access (meaning the current
value is -1), this process gains ownership of exclusive access. On return,
the pid_t pointed to by inPropertyData will contain the new value of the
property.