I agree with paddington, concrete data is also neccesary, not only because of the stiffness issue, but also because of the strength, because you will need stress parameters to show that the strut and tie scheme you are drawing abides withn the described scope of the reinforced concrete practice, if not the code.
Since I by whatever the reason have some custom of being a dissonant voice sometimes, I also point to the fact of that strut and tie, useful that it maybe, it is, and may be more, entirely superseded by proper FEM analysis. Any strut and tie model is shown to be only a guess (it maybe a simplifying and interesting one) but of less interest than the other, if only because the former is less in accord with the laws that rule the behaviour of the structural materials than the other. I in particular (with the most simple exceptions as say deep footings, caps or beams) dislike the complications brougth by some practical rules to find the scheme in equilibrium, whereas you can do better the other way.