Solvent exchange (also called solvent shifting or Ouzo effect) is a generally used bottom-up process to mass-produce nanoscale droplets. In this process, a good solvent for some oil is displaced by a poor one, leading to oil nanodroplet nucleation and subsequent growth. Here we perform this process on a hydrophobic substrate so that sessile droplets so-called surface nanodroplets-develop, following the work of Zhang et al. [Zhang, X.; Lu, Z.; Tan, H.; Bao, L.; He, Y.; Sun, C.; Lohse, D. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 2015, 122, 9253-9257]. In contrast to what was done in that paper, we chose a very well-controlled Hele-Shaw geometry with negligible gravitational effects, injecting the poor solvent in the center of the Hele-Shaw cell, and characterize the emerging nanodroplets as a function of radial distance and flow rates. We find that the mean droplet volume per area <Vol>_area strongly depends on the local Peclet number Pe and follows a universal scaling law <Vol>_area~Pe^(3/4). Moreover, the probability distribution function of the droplet volume strongly depends on the local Pe as well, regardless of the flow rates and radial distance, giving strong support to the theoretical model of the solvent exchange process developed in Zhang et al.s work.